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Urban Development Series

Green Cities
Edited by Michael Lindfield and Florian Steinberg
November 2012
2012 Asian Development Bank
All rights reserved. Published in 2012.
Printed in the Philippines
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Cataloging-In-Publication Data
Lindfield, Michael and Florian Steinberg.
Green cities.
Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank, 2012.
1. Green cities. 2. Environmental management. 3. Asia. I. Asian Development Bank.
The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily
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iii
Contents
Preface v
Foreword viii
Abbreviations x
Contributors xii
Acknowledgment xiv
Introduction
by Michael Lindeld and Florian Steinberg 1
1 Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities
by Florian Steinberg and Michael Lindeld 23
2 Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City:
Transforming Cities through Sustainable Design
and Behavior Change
by Steffen Lehmann 108
3 Energy Strategy for Green Cities
by Thomas Hurst, Debra Lam, and Malcolm Ball 136
4 Transport for Green Cities
by Lloyd Wright 175
5 Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future
by Alan Baird and Theresa Audrey O. Esteban 218
6 Green City Solid Waste Management
by Reynar R. Rollan 262
7 Financing Sustainable Cities
by Michael Lindeld, Vergel Latay, and Vince Michael Docta 296
8 Smart Concepts for Greener Cities
by Alexandra Vogl 373
Conclusion: Green Cities Will Become a Reality
by Michael Lindeld and Florian Steinberg 406
v
Preface
Asias Green City Challenge
Asias cities have been the drivers of the economy and have lifted millions
out of poverty. However, the environmental consequences of this rapid
development are apparent, and the citizens of Asias urban areas are
increasingly insistent that something should be done. And there is an
investment decit in Asian cities infrastructure spending, mostly in
environmental infrastructure, of some $100 billion per annum.
Asian cities can be more environmentally friendly. The resources are
there to achieve this. Up to 80% of gross domestic product today comes
from urban areas in Asia, and its megacities are nation-sized in population
and economic product. New cities, such as the innovative eco-towns in
Japan and eco-cities in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC), have begun
to put into action a sustainable urban development model.
Existing cities need to change as they grow. In particular, to maximize
livability and minimize energy use and environmental impact, Asian cities need
to align the planning and provision of quality, high-capacity public transport
with the provision of well-serviced high density, mixed-use development.
The bus rapid transit system in Guangzhou, Peoples Republic of China, for
example, is integrated with the citys metro system and other nonmotorized
means of transport. It is also integrated with the planning and zoning of
surrounding areas to foster a dense, pedestrian-friendly environment which
allows easy access to services and employment.
The challenge throughout the region is to provide the green infrastructure
needed to maintain growth while cleaning up the environment. Anyone who
has been in trafc jams in Bangkok, Beijing, Jakarta, Manila, or Mumbai will
know that a new approach is needed.
Asian cities and their hinterlands also have potentially severe global
environmental consequences. This can be seen in the ecological footprints of
Asian cities. Although controversial as an absolute measure, city ecological
footprints provide a relative measure of cities resource use intensity and
help us understand their impact. A sustainable footprint is about 1.8 hectares
vi
per person. Today, the average in rural PRC is 1.6 hectares. In Shanghai, it is
7 hectares. The footprint of a typical city in the United States is 9.7 hectares.
The consequence for the environment as the PRC urbanizes and becomes
wealthier is obvious. The constraints of inter-sector and interjurisdictional
coordination, exacerbated by far-reaching decentralization which has
occurred across the region and which has seen capacity-strapped cities and
surrounding rural local governments saddled with unfunded mandates,
mean that even wealthy cities nd it difcult to respond to climate change
imperatives and invest in green infrastructure even if they want to.
To support its developing member countries in more sustainable urban
development, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), under its new Urban
Operational Plan, will analyze the urbanization process in the context of
a countrys economic development and identify the main environmental,
social, and economic development issues relating to the urban sectoras
well as how ADB can add value in the sectorand the proposed areas of
investment focus.
ADB will endeavor to develop longer-term engagements in focus urban
regions. This will provide the opportunity to develop an integrated plan based
on assessments of the environmental, social, and economic priorities for
these regions. The assessment process will identify the key environmental
issues of a city and prioritize investments to address them in an integrated
way across infrastructure sectors to achieve a Green City. ADB, together
with public and private partners, will be involved in investments in water
supply, waste water, solid waste, district heating/cooling, urban transport
(including roads), and energy efciency.
To foster such investments, two things are needed. The rst is to give
cities the capacity and incentive to plan, nance, and implement needed
infrastructure that provides the basis for innovation appropriate to the
competitive advantages of the city and its rural hinterland. The second is to
enable the private sector to participate effectively in this process, leveraging
government resources.
Asias cities are rapidly developing in sophistication and condence.
Despite obvious shortfalls in service provision, there is a developing sense
that, with the right support, incentives, and freedoms, they may be able to
solve their problems and even contribute in a major way to solving global
problems such as greenhouse gas reduction and climate change mitigation.
vi Preface
vii
The challenge is to nd ways to channel resources to effective change agents
in subsovereign governments. This would encourage innovative responses
and effective partnerships with both private sector and community groups.
At ADB, we accept this challenge under our new Urban Operational Plan.
This book is intended to provide examples of how this challenge may
be met.
Bindu N. Lohani
Vice-President
Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development
Asian Development Bank
Preface vii
viii
Foreword
We are pleased to publish this book on Green Cities that, in addition to
Inclusive Cities and Competitive Cities, will continue to form one of three
major themes of the work of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in the
urban sector over the coming years. Publication of this book is particularly
timely in this year of the Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Environment, which represents a major commitment of the international
community to achieving sustainable cities.
The global challenge we face today is that of preventing catastrophic
climate change. This will require ensuring that global greenhouse gas
emissions peak by the year 2020. Reaching this goal will be necessary
to ensure that the increase in global temperature does not exceed 2C
by the end of the 21st century. In addition to ongoing efforts to reduce
emissions, adaptation measures will be required to cope with the adverse
consequences of climate change that have been locked in by emissions of
previous decades. Developing Asia is now responsible for 35% of worldwide
energyrelated carbon dioxide (CO
2
) emissions, compared to only 17% in
1990. In the absence of more widespread use of energy from renewable
sources as well as improved energy efciency, this could reach 45%
by 2030.
Globally, cities account for about 70% of CO
2
emissions, which
comprise a signicant share of global greenhouse gas emissions, the bulk
of these being generated in the building and construction, urban transport,
and energy sectors. Ultimately, reducing CO
2
emissions in urban areas will
require (i) lowering the rate at which buildings consume energy, both during
construction and operation and maintenance; (ii) encouraging use of low-
carbon forms of transport; and (iii) adopting low-carbon means of energy
production. However, achieving such goals will require investment on a
signicant scale. In fact, several tens of billions of dollars will be required
annually to assist developing countries transition to low-carbon and climate-
resilient economies, with $40.0 billion being required annually for adaptation
in Asia and the Pacic alone. For its part, ADB has sponsored numerous
energy efciency projects since 2002, with lending for energy efciency
reaching $2.1 billion per year as of 2011.
One purpose of this book is to direct the green agenda toward compact,
multifunctional, and efcient urban areas. It thus focuses on greening
of a number of urban infrastructure services such as urban transport, and
provision of water and sanitation services, waste management, and energy
sources for urban areas.
Foreword ix
We join the editors and authors of this book in the conviction that the
Asia and Pacic region is moving toward a green economy, and that the
future of cities is an important part of this shift. While a challenging process
that will require time, the foundation for Green Cities must be laid today.
S. Chander
Director General
Regional and Sustainable Development Department
Asian Development Bank
x
Abbreviations
3R reducereuserecycle
ADB Asian Development Bank
ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
ASrIA Association for Sustainable and Responsible Investment
in Asia
AWDO Asian Water Development Outlook
BRT bus rapid transit
CBD central business district
CDIA Cities Development Initiative for Asia
CDM clean development mechanism
CHP combined heat and power
CIF Climate Investment Fund
CNG compressed natural gas
C&D construction and demolition
CO
2
carbon dioxide
CWSI Composite Water Security Index
DEMaP Decentralised Energy Master Planning
EPR extended producer responsibility
FDI foreign direct investment
FSI oor space index
GHG greenhouse gas
HDPE high-density polyethylene
ICT information and communication technology
IRBM integrated river basin management
LFG landll gas
MDG Millennium Development Goal
MEP Ministry of Environmental Protection
MOHURD Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development
MRF materials recovery facility
NAMA nationally appropriate mitigation action
NCBU not-caused-by-us
NGO nongovernment organization
NIMBY not-in-my-backyard
NMT nonmotorized transport
NRW non-revenue water
ODA ofcial development assistance
OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
PACE Property Assessed Clean Energy
PPWSA Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority
PRC Peoples Republic of China
Abbreviations xi
RDF refuse-derived fuel
RFID radio-frequency identication
ROW right-of-way
SRI socially responsible investment
SSTEC SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City
TDM transportation demand management
TOD transitoriented development
tpd tons per day
WTE waste to energy
xii
Contributors
Steffen Lehmann is chair and professor of sustainable design at the
School of Art, Architecture and Design, and director of the Research Centre
for Sustainable Design and Behaviour at the University of South Australia
in Adelaide, Australia. An architect, author, and urbanist, he has held the
United Nations Educational, Scientic and Cultural Organization Chair in
Sustainable Urban Development for Asia and the Pacic since 2008.
Debra Lam advises city and local governments on policy, sustainability,
climate change, and low-carbon issues for Arup. With degrees in foreign
service and public policy, she has lived and worked extensively in East Asia,
Europe, and the United States.
Thomas Hurst is an energy consultant on Arups Energy Strategy Team. With
his broad experience in energy economics, policy, and supply technologies
research, he has worked on a number of high-impact projects, including the
Greater London Authoritys Decentralised Energy for London Programme.
Malcolm Ball was the leader of Arups global energy strategy practice and
has over 30 years experience in energy efciency in all economic sectors.
His most recent work has been in the selection and design of appropriate
strategies for decarbonizing cities. He now leads in nondomestic energy
efciency for the United Kingdoms Green Investment Bank.
Reynar Rollan is a solid waste management expert and an independent
consultant.
Michael Lindeld is lead urban development specialist at the Regional and
Sustainable Development Department (RSDD) of the Asian Development
Bank (ADB) and chair of the Urban Community of Practice. He has more
than 25 years experience in housing and urban infrastructure development.
Florian Steinberg is senior urban development specialist at ADBs Southeast
Asia Department (SERD). He has more than 30 years experience in
development practice and has overseen numerous ADB urban development,
infrastructure, and housing projects.
Alan Baird is a senior water supply and sanitation specialist at ADBs RSDD.
He has more than 20 years professional experience in water treatment,
supply, and distribution; wastewater collection, treatment, and disposal;
sanitation; drainage; and ood alleviation.
Contributors xiii
Lloyd Wright is a senior transport specialist at ADBs RSDD. He assists
in implementing ADBs Sustainable Transport Initiative, which seeks to
catalyze innovative projects that demonstrate the potential of sustainable
modes of transport. He has previously implemented sustainable transport
and environmental initiatives sponsored by Viva, Institute for Transportation
and Development Policy, German Agency for International Cooperation
(GIZ), and the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
Alexandra Vogl is an urban development specialist at ADBs RSDD. She
works with the Urban Community of Practice to operationalize ADBs
Urban Operational Plan by leading, coordinating, and providing strategic
knowledge and oversight to urban operations, and advises cities on
integrated and sustainable urban strategies and technologies. Among
others, she has developed and managed the Smart City Initiative of the City
of Vienna (Austria).
Theresa A. O. Esteban is a water resources ofcer at ADBs RSDD. She
performs technical research, and reviews, analyzes, evaluates, and monitors
a wide range of ADB water-sector initiatives. She also assists with ADBs
work in implementing of technical assistance initiatives, partnerships
with other development agencies, and operation of its Water Community
of Practice.
Vergel K. Latay is an urban development ofcer at ADBs RSDD. He
supports urban sector operations through program development, portfolio
management, technical assistance implementation, as well as coordination
of partnership initiatives and ADBs Urban Community of Practice activities.
Vince Michael Docta is a consultant for ADB where he coordinates fund
operation activities for the Urban Financing Partnerships Facility, a funding
facility established by ADB to provide grants and guarantees that help drive
urban environmental improvements in cities.
xiv
Acknowledgments
We gratefully acknowledge the work of our co-authors and colleagues. The
editors would also like to thank S. Chander and Kunio Senga, directors
general of the Regional and Sustainable Development Department (RSDD)
and the Southeast Asia Department (SERD), respectively; Gil-Hong Kim
and Amy Leung, directors of Sustainable Infrastructure Division (RSDD) and
Urban Development and Water Division (SERD) for their encouragement
and support. Manuscript editing was done by Lynette Mallery. The following
assisted with editorial and production matters: Vergel Latay, November
Tan, Mary France Creus, Rose Fatima L. Cabardo, April-Marie Gallega,
Ma. Priscila del Rosario, Edith Creus, Herminia Saet, Kae Sugawara,
Maricelle Abellar, Ma. Theresa Arago, and Vince Docta. Vergel Latay
provided overall coordination in production and publication.
1
Introduction
by Michael Lindeld and Florian Steinberg
Asias Urban Environmental Challenge
A
sia is urbanizing at a rapid rate. While in 1950 the region was
predominantly rural, with only 17% of its 1.4 billion people living in
cities or towns, recent United Nations projections (2004) indicate that
by mid-2022, 55% of Asians2.7 billion peoplewill live in urban areas
(Figure 1). Thus, from 2015 onward, virtually all of Asias population growth
will occur in urban areas.
But rapid urbanization poses signicant quality-of-life challenges such
as rising inequality and crimes. In particular, it adds tremendous pressure on
the local and global environment. Today, Asia has some of the worlds most
polluted cities and most steeply rising greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
And most of the unique features of Asias urbanization tend to aggravate
environmental problems. Despite these challenges, there are reasons to be
optimistic, as urbanization can help address environmental degradation.
Globally, cities occupy only 2% of the earths total land area but account
for 75% of total resource use. Since waste generation roughly parallels
resource consumption, urban areas unsurprisingly account for a similar share
of total waste generated, the latter including air pollution, toxic efuents, and
solid waste (Girardet 1996). For GHG emissions alone, which include carbon
dioxide, methane, and nitrogen oxide, urban areas account for nearly 80%
of total emissions globally. The environmental implication of such a statistic
is that urban areas are a major contributor to climate change, particularly
when loss of forest and vegetation cover associated with urban expansion
is added to the air pollution impacts referred to above. Given the above,
over the long term, the environmental impact of unchecked urban growth in
the developing world is likely to be catastrophic (Pearce 2006). An outcome
on such a scale would undoubtedly carry with it economic costs that are
signicant by any meaningful measure, such as in relation to a countrys
level of gross domestic product (GDP).
2 Green Cities
In fact, the costs of air pollution alone can reduce a countrys annual
GDP by an estimated 2%4%, or even more for some countries. In the
Peoples Republic of China (PRC), the economic cost of deaths and illnesses
in urban areas due to air pollution is equivalent to an estimated 5% of GDP
(Sheram and Soubbotina 2000). Such costs are not limited to the developing
world. A World Health Organization study that included Austria, France, and
Switzerland found that health costs resulting from trafc pollution alone were
approximately equivalent to 1.7% of GDP, this gure dramatically exceeding
the cost of treating trafc accident injuries (CNN 2000). Similarly, the total
annual cost of air pollution to the 12 million residents of Canadas Ontario
Province is at least $1 billion when hospital admissions, emergency room
visits, and worker absenteeism are taken into account (Ontario Medical
Association 2000). Such gures corroborate the ndings of Ramankutty
(1994), which estimate the annual cost of air and water pollution in Jakarta,
Indonesia at more than $1 billion, the corresponding gure for Bangkok,
Thailand being $2 billion.
Given the size of the population of Asian cities vulnerable to sea-
level rise such as Bangkok, Thailand; Chennai, India; Dhaka, Bangladesh;
Jakarta, Indonesia; and Tianjin, PRC, the impact of Asias urban population
on climate change parameters is of special concern. This is particularly true
Figure 1 Urban vs. Rural Population Growth in Asia: 19502030
(billions of persons)
Source: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2012. World
Urbanization Prospects: 2011 Revision, CD-ROM.
9,000
8,000
7,000
6,000
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
0
1950 1975 2000
Urban Population
2015 2030
1,786
1,537
2,538
2,858
3,264
3,926
3,358
4,983
3,337
0.745
Rural Population
Introduction 3
in light of the forecast of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
which projects an increase in sea levels of 888 centimeters over the course
of the 21st century (Watson 2001). In addition to sea-level rise, the changes
in rainfall patterns and increased severity of storms associated with global
warming are likely to heavily impact urban residents living in poor quality
housing and informal settlements, their numbers being signicant in Asias
urban areas.
Ultimately, Asias rapid urban growth has come at signicant
environmental cost, this falling disproportionately on the poor, the segment
of the urban population most vulnerable to declining environmental quality
and negative impacts of climate change. That said, economic growth in
Asias urban areas has also improved living standards and brought millions
out of poverty. Over the long term, achieving sustained growth in Asias
urban areas will require continued economic advance that brings about
rapid increases in living standards, but that simultaneously addresses the
environmental damage associated with such growth. In particular, this will
require addressing both the waste that results from production, consumption,
and provision of services in urban areas, as well as the negative impacts of
climate change impacts that such waste generation entails.
Thus far, the results of specic measures for reducing the amount of
waste generated by rapid urban growth have not been encouraging. These
measures include encouraging the burning of clean coal, substitution of
natural gas for other fuels, and use of public transport, as well as subsidies
that reward environmentally responsible behavior. Equally disappointing
have been the results of levying fees or taxes on polluters and command-
and-control measures such as regulations that attempt to curtail specic
polluting activities. In this regard, the results of measures for reducing
demand for energy and other pollutants have been especially disappointing.
This notwithstanding, improving the livability of Asias cities will inevitably
require expansion of green space and reductions in air and water pollution,
as well as GHG emissions. Given the disappointing results of the measures
referred to above, the chief means through which this desired shift is likely to
be accomplished will be better planning, together with technological change
that substantially reduces demand for fossil fuels while simultaneously
maintaining the quality of life. Achieving such improvements will ultimately
require a shift in focus on the part of policy makers from economic growth to
improvement in the quality of life.
This book addresses the entire array of environmental issues associated
with rapid urbanization in Asia. In particular, it focuses on (i) the environmental
problems the region is likely to face as rapid urbanization proceeds, (ii) the
implications of the latter for the global environment, and (iii) measures for
addressing both.
4 Green Cities
Overview of the Book
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities by Florian
Steinberg examines cities from the perspective of functioning as catalysts
for the creation and adoption of green technologies. While much has
been written and said of late about the need for cities to be both inclusive
and competitive if they are to support future rapid urbanization, this
chapter explores the vital additional dimension of urban environmental
sustainability. Ultimately, the chapter sees urban densication coupled
with compact land-use solutions as being the primary vehicle for achieving
development of environmental technology that increases both energy and
land-use efciency. Viewed from this perspective, structures cease to be
merely by-products of architectural design processes, but instead function
as catalysts for increasing the economic and environmental efciency of
the urbanization process. The chapter is replete with examples of initiatives
that facilitate greening of urban environments while simultaneously
overcoming problems commonly associated with urbanization itself. For
example, creating pedestrian-friendly urban environments and healthy
habitats reduces trafc density and encourages widespread use of public
transport. Similarly, introduction of smart technologies that allow energy
production to be distributed over a wide range of sources can potentially
transform cities from voracious energy-consuming conglomerations
to net energy producers. Likewise, delivery of human services through
environmentally sound technologies increases ecological efciency and
reduces GHG emissions. However, adoption and application of such
Source: ADB. 2011. Green Cities Brochure.
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Introduction 5
principles and technologies is far from instantaneous. As green technology
remains a relatively new eld, its application in Asia is likely to require
some time. While higher-income countries will undoubtedly lead this
process, middle-income countries are likely to adopt such technologies
quickly as the economic and environmental benets of greener cities
become increasingly apparent.
Metabolism of Green Cities by Stefan
Lehmann views the cities of Asia and
the Pacic as being at a crossroad
with regard to the sustainability of their
development trajectories. For example,
over the past 2 decades, Bangkok;
Hong Kong, China; Jakarta; Kuala
Lumpur; Shanghai; and Singapore have
all transitioned to a high-carbon-use
development trajectory that is in all
likelihood unsustainable over the long
term. An important feature of the chapter
is that it introduces several concepts
used in discerning differing aspects of
sustainability as these relate to particular
urban development scenarios. Examples
include green urbanism, which refers to the ability of an urban system
to exist, grow, or shrink without negatively impacting the ecosystem in
which it resides, thus maintaining a healthy balance between the urban
environment concerned and its surrounding hinterlands. Similarly, a zero
waste city is an urban area that organizes ows of matriel necessary
for servicing the urban area in question so as to achieve 100% recovery
of all by-products of resource use. Due to the importance of urban
waste generation as a driver of climate change, the strategies reviewed
in this chapter are central to addressing its damaging impacts. Finally,
urban metabolisma 21st-century conceptrelates to maintaining an
appropriate balance between production and consumption of public
and private goods, the built and the unbuilt environment, and local as
opposed to global perspectives on environmental sustainability.
Energy Approaches for Green Cities by Thomas Hurst, Debra Lam, and
Malcolm Ball sees energy as a vital factor in the urban socioeconomic
development process. For example, access to relatively inexpensive
fossil fuels enabled the Industrial Revolution, and thence the growth of
the urban areas in which it ourished. However, because fossil fuels
are less abundant and relatively more expensive today than during the
Industrial Revolution, security of supply, price, and reducing demand for
carbon-based forms of energy have increasingly become vital factors
in sustaining economic advance. This has driven not only international
Source: ADB. 2011. Green Cities Brochure.
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6 Green Cities
commitments and national legislation relating to energy security and
self-sufciency but, equally important, growing public awareness that
a change in approach to fueling urban areas is required, if long-term
environmental sustainability is to be achieved. While individual cities
may have little efcacy in assuring their future energy supplies, there are
numerous energy-use parameters that are within their control. Examples
include the carbon intensity of their energy-use patterns, the degree to
which they are vulnerable to the negative impacts of climate change,
and the ability to exploit opportunities for diversifying the sources of the
energy they consume. Some cities have exploited these opportunities
by adopting bold policies for reducing the carbon intensity of their
development trajectories and have supported implementation of these
policies by investments underwritten by creative nancing arrangements.
Implementation of such policy initiatives is generally preceded by three
phases of development. These include (i) building a knowledge base,
(ii) performing a strategy analysis, and (iii) implementing low-carbon
energy consumption programs. The case study presented in the chapter,
which shows how London has implemented an initiative of this type,
demonstrates that implementing energy-efciency initiatives is well
within the grasp of individual cities.
Transport for Green Cities by Lloyd F. Wright describes sustainable
transport systems as being accessible, safe, environment-friendly, and
affordable. These attributes together incorporate several dimensions
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Introduction 7
of sustainability. However, because petroleum-based fuels dominate
transport-sector energy consumption, Asias rapid pace of economic
advance causes it to account for a signicant share of vehicular
emissions, which are in turn a primary contributor to the GHG emissions
that drive global climate change. Further, because Asia is projected
to account for the majority of future increases in GHG emissions,
addressing the regions rate of growth of vehicular emissions is a critical
factor in mitigating global climate change. Because there is a direct
relationship between the quantity of fossil fuels consumed by vehicular
means of transport and the amount of vehicular emissions released, the
future urban transport means that could signicantly reduce the rate
of growth of vehicular emissions include low-carbon public transport
systems, expanded use of nonmotorized transport, integrated urban
transport planning, and trafc management. While some transport-sector
energy initiatives, such as developing new vehicle technologies, may
only yield results in the medium to long term, others lead to large-scale
reductions in vehicular emissions over a short time horizon. Examples
include using modes of transport that consume less energy and thus
release lesser emissions, and improvements in the efciency with which
existing modes of transport are used. Introducing information technology
into the design and operation of transport systems in order to produce
intelligent transport systems (ITSs) is likewise a promising tool for
making future transport systems more sustainable than they are at
present. Aspects of ITSs already in use include in-vehicle technologies
that reduce energy consumption; computer-based traveler information
systems that reduce the number, frequency, and length of vehicular trips;
computer-based management of transport systems; and increased use of
electronic-based transactions that obviate the need for vehicular trips.
Water Service Cities by Alan Baird
and Audrey Esteban traces the
evolution of urban water supply
policies that have, in turn, focused on
sewerage, drainage, and ultimately
water sensitivity. Drawing on numerous
examples of initiatives undertaken in
Asian cities as well as international
best practices, the chapter outlines
the benets of creating water-sensitive
cities, explains why water sensitivity is
vital to sustainability, and describes
what is required in making urban
areas water-sensitive. The chapters
descriptions of water-sensitive technologies, such as decentralized
wastewater systems, rainwater harvesting, and wastewater recycling
provide practical examples of the options available for creating water-
sensitive cities.
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8 Green Cities
Solid Waste Management by Reynar
Rollan explains that the variety of waste
management systems employed by Asian
cities generally reects each citys level of
technical ability, nancial resources, and
environmental awareness. As a result,
the standards employed and the level
of environmental performance achieved
vary widely between lower-income urban
centers and cities in the regions developed
countries. That said, many elements of
green-city solid waste management systems
have been adopted by most Asian cities.
In fact, a legal framework for effective solid
waste management was established in
most Asian countries by the turn of the 21st
century. Furthermore, numerous jurisdictions
have launched education campaigns
for increasing environmental awareness
among all segments of society. Over
time, these campaigns create a culture of
waste management appropriate to urban environmental sustainability.
Such a culture understands (i) the implications for urban sustainability of
dwindling resources and space and (ii) how low utilization rates of reusable
materials lead to deteriorating health and environmental conditions.
Widespread awareness of both of these factors is generally what drives
governments, institutions, private sector entities, and residents alike to
work together in achieving the goals of solid waste management initiatives,
and thus allows green cities to be achieved, regardless of the average
income level of the urban area concerned.
Green Financing by Michael Lindeld explains that the key to
sustainable provision of urban services is a service- or demand-
focused institutional framework. This requires service providers that
are (i) capable both technically and managerially, (ii) accountable and
responsive to customer needs, and (iii) driven by performance in that the
service provider in question faces incentives for providing cost-efcient
service that is both affordable to customers and nancially sustainable.
Furthermore, such service providers incorporate innovations that
produce savings and other efciencies. Ultimately, the pool of nancing
available to a particular city for nancing environment-related initiatives
depends on the degree to which that city (i) maximizes revenue from
both existing and potential sources, (ii) leverages additional resources
from the private sector, and (iii) accesses funds from both international
and local sources that support green investments. Aside from collecting
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Introduction 9
all mandated taxes, potential sources of additional revenue include
(i) user charges, (ii) emission or efuent charges, (iii) product charges,
(iv) tradable rights, (v) marketable permits, (vi) employer taxes,
(vii) property development tax revenue gains, (viii) tax-increment
nancing, and (ix) the existence or creation of refund systems.
Smart Cities by Alexandra Vogl relates how the technologies that shape
urban life are becoming ever smarter and supportive of energy efciency.
In fact, numerous city systems and networks have been retrotted
with devices that count, measure, and record energy-use parameters,
and connect databases and information sources. This suggests that
retrotting existing cities is a more cost-efcient and achievable option
than is building entire smart cities from the ground up, since instant
smart cities cost $30 billion to $60 billion on average.
Recommended Approach to Greening Asias Cities
What are Green Cities?
In this book, we distinguish green cities (cities that have already achieved,
or are moving toward long-term environmental sustainability in all of its
aspects) from cities that continue to pursue environmentally unsustainable
development trajectories. We distinguish between these two types of cities
by evaluating their actions and, in particular, how the actions they undertake
either achieve or fail to achieve improvements in the living environment of their
residents or to address environmental challenges. Furthermore, for a city to
be considered green by our denition, these measures must be undertaken
in a comprehensive, planned manner that not only positively impacts the city
in question but also contributes to environmental sustainability at the global
level. Which actions a city collectively undertakes, the manner in which it
undertakes these actions, and the outcome of those actions thus form the
criteria for determining how green a particular city is.
The structure of this book reects the criteria for identifying green cities
as outlined. As a result, the chapters that follow identify investments that
might be undertaken to make a particular city more green. Such investments
include initiatives for improving planning, transport, energy efciency,
industrial metabolism, and water supply and sanitation facilities. Because
nancing is necessary for implementing these investments, the book then
discusses vehicles for nancing environmental infrastructure initiatives.
The concluding chapter then outlines governance and awareness-raising
actions that may be used to mobilize the political and social resolve necessary
for undertaking particular investments. A set of tools for monitoring progress
in achieving environmental sustainability is then presented.
10 Green Cities
Which investments are required?
The ultimate test of the long-term feasibility of any urban development
model is its sustainability, since a primary purpose of an urban area is
to provide a venue for economic activity undertaken by its inhabitants.
Thus, environmental sustainability holds the key to long-term survival of
urban environments, as well as sustained economic advance. Six types
of investments are required for achieving green cities, and thus ensuring
the long-term survival of the urban environment: (i) low-carbon transport
systems; (ii) a green industrial sector; (iii) energy-efcient buildings;
(iv) greening of the city itself; (v) green, resilient infrastructure; and
(vi) intelligent systems (Figure 2). Asias urban policy makers are increasingly
aware of the importance of pursuing these six types of investments. This
awareness is reected in the fact that Asian cities are increasingly embracing
urban development models that reduce the rate at which energy is consumed
by buildings, industries, and transport systems.
Support to Low-Carbon
Transport
Green
Industry
Complex
Energy-Ecient
Buildings
Green,
Resilient
Infrastructure
City
Greening
Intelligent
Systems
Figure 2 Investments Required for Achieving Green Cities
Source: Asian Development Bank.
Introduction 11
Low-Carbon Transport
A powerful but underused tool for creating sustainable cities is inuencing
the scale, location, and type of land development, and, in particular, the
manner in which the citys transport infrastructure is integrated into these
land-use parameters. Since resources necessary for economic activity are
often channeled into locales in which ease of physical access is greatest,
the planning and design of transportation networks greatly impacts the
spatial dispersion of urban development. This is similarly true of water and
sanitation facilities, infrastructure in general, and housing.
Unfortunately, policy makers at the urban level rarely make use of this
powerful growth management tool. Using it to its full potential requires four
steps, the rst of which is to link planning and implementation. This is most
effectively accomplished by including representatives from all segments of
society, such as national and city governments, public works departments,
private sector developers, and civil society in general, in the planning process.
Second, the focus of both arterial and secondary road network development
should be those areas in which development is desired. Third, design and
construction guidelines that are consistent with the needs and means of
future occupants, including low-income groups, should be formulated. Fourth,
public transport infrastructure that is both efcient and environmentally sound
should be provided at the onset of the physical development process, rather
than in response to later congestion. Use of zero-emission vehicles and
bicycles should be encouraged and private cars excluded from the urban
core from the outset.
Source: ADB. 2011. Green Cities Brochure.
12 Green Cities
Green Industry
While it is true that cities with efcient recycling systems can reuse up to 75%
of household waste, manufacturing and construction generate four times
as much waste as do households (Girardet 1996). One way to overcome
the problems associated with industrial waste generation is to turn the
by-products of one industry into the inputs of another. This approach is used
by circle economy (CE) cities in the PRC, and by Japans eco-towns.
Successful implementation of the CE approach to waste reduction
requires both government involvement and well-planned institutional
arrangements. While some additional costs are associated with adopting the
CE approach to waste management, many CE solutions are economically
advantageous in the long run, particularly when the environmental damage
costs thus avoided are taken into account. CE pilot programs already in
operation have conrmed the waste reduction potential of the CE approach,
given that CE projects focus on
improving the effectiveness and efciency of CE policies;
actively involving producers, local governments, community groups,
industrial associations, professional networks, and nongovernment
organizations in the formulation and establishment of CE initiatives;
building CE implementation capacity, and monitoring the progress
achieved by such programs;
providing appropriate training programs and disseminating the results of
local and international CE initiatives; and
strengthening governance by establishing high-level leadership,
coordinating implementation of CE initiatives across sectors and
ministries, and promoting private sector participation in CE initiatives
rather than relying on public sector agencies to directly implement such
initiatives (World Bank 2007).
Japans Kitakyushu Eco-Town has implemented the CE approach
to waste management on a large scale by creating an extensive range of
recycling and environmental industries that process and produce plastic,
paper, metal, ofce equipment, and vehicles, as well as industries that
process construction waste including solvents.
Introduction 13
Energy-Efcient Buildings
Due to the falling cost of solar energy panels, buildings can be made largely
energy self-sufcient. This is particularly true when their use is coupled
with the use of eco-friendly devices and practices that can cut electricity
consumption by 60% or more. Incentives for constructing energy-efcient
buildings and adopting energy conservation behaviors are most effective
when put into place at both the national and local levels.
In addition to the transport and land-use energy conservation initiatives
referred to earlier, cities can reduce energy consumption at the household
and even individual level by planning appropriately, encouraging use of
wind-driven and solar electricity generation, supporting development and
use of efcient transport technologies, and encouraging use of energy-
efcient construction materials. Many of the incentives for encouraging such
benecial changes can be put into place by appropriately modifying building
regulations, utility pricing tariffs, and property taxes.
Building codes can be used to maintain densities at levels consistent
with environmental sustainability, as well as to encourage use of natural light,
harvesting of rainwater, and alternative energy sources. They can likewise
be used to address wastewater problems in advance of their occurrence.
In many Asian jurisdictions, building codes are based on those in force in
countries with climates and physical and social environments vastly different
from those prevalent in Asia. Adopting building codes that are appropriate
Source: ADB. 2011. Green Cities Brochure.
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to Asias rapidly growing, population-dense citiesmany of which are
located in tropical or subtropical climatesprovides policy makers with an
opportunity to both review the building codes currently in force and revise
them in a way that is consistent with long-term environmental sustainability.
An example of a vehicle for encouraging environment-friendly building
construction is the US Green Building Councils Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design Green Building Rating System. This is a voluntary,
consensus-based rating system that encourages builders in the United
States to adopt industry-wide benchmarks for designing, constructing, and
operating buildings in a manner consistent with long-term environmental
sustainability. The operating costs of buildings thus constructed and
operated are lower than those of conventional buildings, since they consume
less water and energy, generate less waste, and, as a result, release lesser
GHGs. Also, their asset values are generally higher than those of conventional
buildings.
A similar approach could be adopted in Asia, though this would require
national, provincial, and local governments to develop construction guidelines
and rating systems attuned to long-term environmental sustainability. Such
a program would achieve the greatest success if appropriate incentives
were provided for encouraging private sector developers to adopt the rating
system prior to both undertaking new construction, as well as upgrading
the existing stock of conventional buildings. Formulation of incentives for
upgrading the existing building stock should be promulgated following an
evaluation of the existing building stock by local government bodies.
City Greening
Because wind speed impacts temperature, rates of evaporative cooling, and
plant transpiration, it is an important factor in formulating passive cooling
strategies for urban environments. A well-ventilated built environment
encourages airow, which in turn reduces ambient temperatures, and
thus energy loads and air pollution resulting from energy consumption.
Incorporating parks, green roofs, and bodies of water into the design of the
urban environment magnies the cooling effect of wind and leads to even
lower levels of energy consumption and consequently air pollution.
This strategy of making full use of natural air circulation, fresh air
distribution, and microclimate protection has been successfully incorporated
into Abu Dhabis Masdar development, as well as into the planned
redevelopment of Thanh Hoa, Viet Nam (Raven 2010). Parks and open
plazas are vital components of such designs, since trees absorb carbon and
sulfur emissions, lter dust, cool the urban environment, produce oxygen,
and help lower carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide levels.
Introduction 15
Rapid population growth at the global level has vastly increased
the amount of land used for food production. In fact, nearly 30% of the
earths total land surface is now used for agricultural purposes. This has
radically altered the natural landscape and functioning of ecosystems.
However, alternative approaches to food production that can prevent further
encroachment on ecosystems while also increasing urban resilience are
available. The experience of Shanghai, which is nearly self-sufcient in the
production of vegetables and grain, demonstrates that signicant amounts
of food can be grown on empty urban lots. Similarly, rooftop gardens in
Berlin and New York are often used for urban farming, the scale of which can
range from simple balcony boxes to vertical farms that grow food inside
environment-controlled, multistory buildings that recycle organic, human,
and animal waste and wastewater (Figure 3). Such initiatives provide an
alternative to trucking or ying produce in from distant locales where land-
intensive methods of food production are used.
Figure 3 A Vertical Farm
Gray water collection and
sand fltration system -
used to irrigate soil crops
and fush toilets
Methane and CO
2
tanks -
methane used for heating
biogas digester, apartment
cooking and heating
Biogas Digester-Methaneand
CO
2
by-products
Black water gravity
fltration system
through perimeter
hydroponics
Black water liquid and
solid separation tanks-
solid waste dried in kiln
for fertilizer
Liquid separate sent to
Hydroponic Filtration
Loop
Nutrients removed
by plants as source of
fertilizer
Black water gravity fed
fltration system through
perimeter hydroponics
By-product of fresh
water used in gray
water collection or
safely returned to water
source
2009 BLAKE KURASEK
Black water collection -
from building sewage
CO
2
= carbon dioxide.
Source: Despommier, Dickson. The Vertical Farm: Reducing the Impact of Agriculture on Ecosystem
Functions and Services. Columbia University, New York. Available: www.verticalfarm.com
16 Green Cities
Green, Resilient Infrastructure
The substantial amount of energy that cities consume provides a signicant
opportunity for energy savings, which can be achieved through technical
innovations such as energy-saving lightbulbs, automatic switching for
street lighting, and improvements in management and operation of
commercial buildings. Optimizing the pumping operations of water supply
and sewerage systems can also result in signicant power savings. Smart
grids, distributed power, and efcient district heating and cooling all provide
examples of opportunities for reducing energy consumption by urban
infrastructure facilities.
Intelligent Systems
While private citizens and commercial enterprises have traditionally interacted
with government ofcials in public ofces, personal computers can allow
travel-free, 24-hour access to government services. For example, Tirunelveli,
a city in Tamil Nadu, India, has undertaken a number of e-governance
programs that track the condition of streetlights and status of garbage
collection, monitor legal cases, allow access to land records, disseminate
information regarding town planning initiatives, address complaints, and
collect taxes and fees. Geographically dispersed government-agency kiosks
provide both an alternative to computer-based systems, and an intermediate
means of improving access to government agencies that require little or no
vehicular travel in jurisdictions in which use of personal computers is not yet
widespread. Use of such technologies can improve information and service
delivery, encourage community participation in governance, and make
government more transparent and accountable.
Financing Sustainable Cities
A city can nance initiatives that move it toward long-term environmental
sustainability by maximizing the amount of revenue derived from existing
sources, identifying new sources of revenue, leveraging additional resources
from the private sector, and accessing international and local funding that
supports green investments.
Introduction 17
Maximizing Revenue from Conventional Sources
Aside from collecting all mandated taxes, a city may expand its revenue
stream by introducing the following:
User service charges set at levels that allow recovery of the full cost of
service delivery. For example, full-cost recovery in the context of user
service charges for water and electric power include the full cost of supply,
any damages or depreciation caused by usage, as well as the opportunity
cost of denying other potential users use of the resource in question.
Because other users includes the ecosystem itself, the full cost of long-
term environmental damage incurred in service delivery should also be
capitalized into the price paid by consumers of water and electricity.
Emission or efuent charges based on both the quantity of waste
generated and the degree of environmental damage caused. Such
charges should be applicable to wastewater in addition to all other
pollutants.
Product charges levied on products, the consumption of which pollutes
the ecosystem. For example, if consumption of the product concerned
pollutes surface water or groundwater either during or after consumption,
Source: ADB. 2008. Managing Asian Cities.
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18 Green Cities
the product charge levied on the good in question should equal the
actual value of the damage caused.
Tradable rights granting permission to use a specied quantity of a
resource (e.g., water). Note that the introduction of tradable rights
likewise requires establishment of a market in which such rights can be
traded.
Marketable permits that entitle the bearer to generate and release a
specied quantity of pollutants. Establishing a market for such permits
likewise allows the polluter in question to treat the waste he or she
generates in a manner that reduces the environmental damage caused
to zero, and then to sell the permit applicable to that quantity of pollution
at the prevailing market price. Alternatively, the polluter in question may
choose to not treat the waste he or she generates, and to compensate
for the environmental damage caused by purchasing additional permits.
Universal employer taxes levied on all employers except those below a
specied scale (e.g., making establishments that employ fewer than a
specied number of employees exempt from such taxes).
Establishing publicprivate partnerships for nancing green development
initiatives.
Tax-increment nancing, under which a portion of tax revenues
generated from improvements of a specic type are earmarked for
repayment of the cost of those improvements.
Refund systems for goods packaged in returnable containers that
encourage their delivery to recycling or appropriate disposal centers.
Leveraging Private Sector Financing
Private sector participation in the delivery of basic services such as water
and electricity is often forthcoming when certainty regarding the fundamental
parameters that affect private sector protability is provided. For example,
such certainty is provided when the maximum price a private sector
contractor may charge per unit of service delivered is transparently stated,
and the time horizon over which private sector investment may be recouped
is specied in long-term contracts or through a transparent regulatory
system. Specication of maximum price may include such nuances as
sliding scales that extend concessional pricing to low-income households.
If the government itself is to subsidize such concessional pricing, provision
of subsidized amounts must be guaranteed through appropriate clauses in
the contract concerned.
Introduction 19
Further private sector participation in the provision of basic services, such
as water and electricity, may be forthcoming, if the components of provision
of such goods to be nanced by the private sector are unbundled from the
components to be nanced by the government. For example, investments in
the establishment or upgrading of a water treatment plant can be separated
from both the piped water delivery network and the infrastructure that
provides the water at the point of source or collection, such as a reservoir
or well. This allows private sector transactors to calculate rates of return on
each component individually, and thus to invest in individual components to
their liking, and to avoid investment in components that are appropriate to
government provision.
Funding Green Investments
While supplemental nancing for environment-friendly projects that
complements conventional nancing rarely covers the full investment cost
of a project, such supplemental nancing often allows otherwise nonviable
projects to become nancially viable. The following are examples of such
supplemental nancing:
The Clean Development Mechanism (dened in the Kyoto Protocol),
which funds projects that reduce GHG emissions through energy
efciency or through bilateral cap-and-trade systems, such as Japans
New Domestic Clean Development Mechanism or the Republic of
Koreas Emission Reduction Scheme.
Climate Investment Funds that nance improvement in fuel economy
standards, acceleration of fuel-switching initiatives, and shifts toward
environment-friendly operations in public transport systems in
metropolitan areas.
The Global Environment Facility, a partnership of 182 countries and
international institutions, nongovernment organizations, and private
sector entities, that addresses global environmental issues. Since 1991,
this facility has allocated $9.2 billion to such investments, this amount
being supplemented by more than $40 billion in conancing.
The Clean Energy Financing Partnership Facility, which helps
developing countries achieve signicant, measurable changes in energy
consumption as a means of securing a low-carbon future for the earth as
a whole. This facility nances investments in energy efciency, funds some
technology transfer costs, and provides grant assistance for environment-
friendly activities such as development of green technologies.
Ethical funds, which pool the money of hundreds of investors into a
single fund that makes stock market investments, the resulting overall
portfolio being inuenced by social, environmental, and other ethical
20 Green Cities
considerations. Specic objective criteria are used in deciding whether
to include a particular company in the investment portfolio concerned.
Export credit agencies, which are government agencies that promote
exports from the home country by nancing transactions for which the
private sector has no taste due to the degree of risk involved, such as
investments in innovative but yet unproven clean technologies. Export
credit agencies collectively provide nancing of $50 billion$70 billion
annually, and often support large-scale industrial and infrastructure
projects in developing countries (Norlen et al. 2002).
The Urban Financing Partnership Facility, which was established by
the Asian Development Bank (ADB) for the purpose of raising and
using development partner funds to conance urban environmental
infrastructure projects, as well as a broad range of technical assistance
that supports preparation and formulation of such projects. This facility
likewise supports investment in climate change mitigation and local
urban infrastructure projects that benet the poor.
All of these nancing vehicles can be used as supplemental sources of
nancing for environment-friendly projects. This is likewise true of the Cities
Development Initiative for Asia, which is an ADB-sponsored partnership of
development agencies that focuses specically on environment-friendly
investments in Asian cities.
Transforming Cities into Livable Urban
Environments
Asian countries share a vision of one day making all of the regions cities
livable. The knowledge and nancial resources required for realizing that
vision already exist. However, climate change remains a growing threat to
that visions realization, while at the same time being primarily the product of
the very cities whose future it endangers. It is therefore essential that urban
energy demand be reduced and the undesirable environmental impacts
associated with energy production be mitigated, if long-term environmental
sustainability of the regions urban environments is to be achieved.
Ultimately, reducing energy demand requires more efciently managing the
urban design process overall, as well as urban logistics systems.
Rapidly growing Asian cities will contribute more than half the global
increase in GHG emissions over the coming 20 years. The scale of such
emissions is so great that technological innovation alone cannot be relied upon
to reduce the level of such emissions by any appreciable amount. Thus, well-
resourced urban institutions will, in all likelihood, be necessary for ensuring
Introduction 21
that pollution-reducing technological innovations are adopted with sufcient
speed to allow long-term environmental sustainability to be achieved.
To encourage sustainable development of Asian cities, the Asian Cities
agenda must ensure that the following measures are promoted appropriately:
Local land use and transportation patterns. Municipal land use,
population density, and transportation planning decisions directly
inuence whether people and businesses have transport choices that
allow them to save energy and money. If long-term environmental
sustainability is to be achieved by Asian cities, the goals of the urban
transport planning process must include construction of low-carbon
public transport infrastructure, incentives for use of nonmotorized
transport, and disincentives for using automobiles for daily commutes.
Building construction and resilient, energy-efcient infrastructure.
Through zoning codes, building codes, and permitting processes,
municipalities can encourage construction processes, neighborhood
designs, and urban infrastructure that reduce energy consumption and
thus nancial outlays. In short, achieving environmental sustainability
requires that planning for climate resilience become an integral part of
infrastructure planning.
Source: ADB. 2011. Green Cities Brochure.
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22 Green Cities
Local economic activity. Municipal economic development initiatives
are opportunities for encouraging low-energy, zero-carbon development,
and for putting into place environment-friendly initiatives such as
reducereuserecycle plans. Initiatives that reduce energy consumption
not only promote long-term environmental sustainability but likewise
reduce nancial outlays for energy over the long term.
ADB helps national and city governments to
better target investments in capacity development that support Green
City investments as mentioned earlier;
work collaboratively in identifying infrastructure projects that improve
the long-term environmental sustainability of Asian cities;
build partnerships that include development agencies, the private sector,
and governments that can be used to provide incentives for improved
environmental performance; and
develop networks that strengthen collaboration between the private
sector and the governments concerned.
ADBs recent agship publication, Key Indicators for Asia and the Pacic
2012, featured a special chapter on green urbanization in Asia. The interesting
conclusion was that Asias booming cities must go green or risk disaster,
and particularly megacities have no other way to go but green as echoed
in the press (The Philippine Inquirer, Manila, 18 August 2012). This is about
these choices of Asian cities going green. Asia must act now to pave the
way for green, resource-friendly cities, or face a bleak and environmentally
degraded future.
23
CHAPTER 1
Spatial Development
and Technologies for
Green Cities
By Florian Steinberg and Michael Lindeld
Visions of the City of the Future
A
bout 2 to 3 decades ago, the topic of building the future city was
largely conceived as an agenda of inclusiveness and equity to help the
urban poor and the marginalized become part of mainstream urban
life (Satterthwaite and Hardoy 1997, Satterthwaite 1999). Today, as cities
prepare to design their futures, urban complexities have grown, challenging
cities to achieve not only inclusiveness but also resilience to climate change.
Cities need to transform themselves for a greener future, consuming less
carbon and reducing their ecological footprints on surrounding hinterlands.
There is thus now a demand for low- or zero-carbon cities. Glimpses of that
vision emerged in 1992 at the Rio Earth Summit as Local Agenda 21, which
cited the need to develop local agendas for sustainable living in the 21st
century, alongside commitments to achieving the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). This vision was renewed during the Rio+20 United Nations
Conference on Sustainable Development in June 2012 (UN 2012).
Urbanization is now recognized as a dening feature of the 21st century,
thus turning attention toward the quality and nature of new cities and
communities around the world. According to World Bank (2009a) estimates,
the number of urban areas in developing countries will triple between 2011
and 2030 (UN-HABITAT 2010, Angel 2011, McKinsey Global Institute 2011).
By 2025, 16 of the worlds 27 megacities (cities with more than 10 million
inhabitants) will be in Asia (ADB 2011). With the urban population expected
to grow from 3 billion to 4 billion over the next 1520 years, cities are faced
with the unprecedented challenge and opportunity of planning, developing,
24 Green Cities
and managing an ecological, economically sustainable, and inclusive
future (ADB 2008, Steinberg and Lindeld 2011). Urban growth projections
imply that cities will need to increase densities and grow at their periphery.
However, countries such as the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) and India
will have to build hundreds of new cities to accommodate the bulk of their
new growth (McKinsey Global Institute 2009, 2010). By 2030, it is predicted
that the PRC will have an urban population of 1 billion people and 221 cities
of more than 1 million inhabitants. The way these cities are managed will
affect efforts toward climate change mitigation and adaptation.
The development of comprehensive and sustainable green city models,
or eco-cities, will be vital for the urban future of Asia and the Pacic, which has
the fastest-growing regional economy, and hence the fastest-growing energy
and carbon consumption, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Though
some see cities as a major problem of humankind, others consider them the
best cure for our planets growing pains (Kunzig 2011). The sustainability of
their futures will depend on their urbanization patterns, spatial structures,
transportation patterns, management of resources consumed, and waste
generated.
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
recognized that GHG emissions have grown by 70% since preindustrial
times (IPCC 2007). By 2015, carbon dioxide (CO
2
) emissions would have
to be stabilized if global temperature increases were to be contained within
a range of 24C. Climate change impacts and their mitigation, therefore,
represent a massive challenge for the urban future of the fast-growing Asia
and the Pacic. Since cities are today becoming home to about half the
population of Asia and the Pacic taken together, their land-use patterns
are subject to tremendous change (International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development/The World Bank 2010a, 2010b; JICA 2011; UN-HABITAT
2011; UGEC Viewpoint 2010). Climate change is adding another layer of
challenges, with coastal cities becoming particularly vulnerable to the
impacts of sea-level rise. However, in addition to the latter, it is equally
changes in weather patterns that have brought drought and desertication
to some higher continental locations that have presented unprecedented
challenges. Sustainable development of cities will require a balancing
act in supplying food and water, and managing wastes, air pollution, and
environmental health. Cities are the rst to react to any policy measure and
are thus prime candidates for piloting projects.
The greening of cities will require some, or preferably all, of the
following: (i) reduction of chemical and physical hazards, (ii) control over
environmental impacts on health, (iii) creation of quality environments for
all, (iv) minimized ecological footprints outside the urban area, (v) ensured
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 25
sustainable consumption, and (vi) adaptation to climate change impacts
(Satterthwaite 1997).
Sustainable urban lifestyles can be created through effective urban
planning and management (Girardet 1992). There exist options for an urban
future that supports green city development that leads to health gains, in
addition to high levels of productivity and competitiveness. In this context, it
is evident that traditional political and spatial boundaries, as well as traditional
planning and development paradigms, will become obsolete. Classical
parameters of urban design and developmental control are irrelevant, and
will undergo a drastic evolution as the green city concept takes root.
Cities and the Green Economy
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP 2010) dened the
green economy as one that results in improved human well-being and
social equity, while signicantly reducing environmental risks and ecological
scarcities. This stands for a low-carbon, resource-efcient, and socially
inclusive economy, wherein growth in income and employment is driven
by public and private investment aimed at reducing carbon emissions and
pollution, enhancing energy and resource efciency, and preventing the loss
of biodiversity and ecosystem services (UNEP 2011b, 16).
The green economy, which has entered policy discourse in recent years, is
expected to provide a more constructive pathway for the future, replacing
existing economic practices that have led to growing environmental risks,
ecological scarcities, and social disparities. For example, cleaner and more
efcient transport can improve access to services and other amenities, and
can help reduce local pollution levels and health inequalities. Residents and
their children who live in the vicinity of greener urban areas can become
more resistant to stress, and have higher measures of self-worth and social
cohesion. These impacts of greener cities and improved environments
can increase social equity and the quality of life. Transitioning to a green
economy has sound economic and social justications. However, there is
currently no consensus on how crises, such as the global food security
crisis, scarcity of fresh water and a renewable supply of clean water, and
the need for improved sanitation and renewable energy, can be brought into
the mainstream discourse of societies and cities. These crises are severely
impacting the possibility of sustaining prosperity and achieving the MDGs.
While the global population increased from 29% to 49% between 1950
and 2005 (United Nations Population Division 2010), global carbon emissions
from the burning of fossil fuels increased by almost 500% (Boden, Marland,
26 Green Cities
and Andres 2010). Furthermore, rapid urbanization is creating pressure on the
supply of fresh water, sewage treatment infrastructure, the overall residential
environment, and public healthall of which affect the urban poor the most.
Urban sprawl and unplanned urban expansion increase energy demand and
carbon emissions, thereby distorting the ecosystems of which they are part
and making cities socially divisive places in which to live. This process has
been called the negative ecological footprint (Figure 1.1, Rees 1992, Rees
and Wackernagel 1994, Wackernagel 1994, Wackernagel and Rees 1996,
Wackernagel et al. 2002).
Cities are undoubtedly among the various pathways to a green economy.
For the rst time in human history, more than half the human population lives
in urban areas. As a result, cities account for 75% of energy consumption
(UN-HABITAT 2009) and 75% of carbon emissions (Clinton Foundation
2010). The implication of this is that the evolution of the green economy
depends on cities acting as incubators for innovation (Kamal-Chaoui and
Robert 2009). The innovativeness of cities promises unique opportunities for
them to take a lead role in the greening of economies. The Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development estimates that there are 10 times
more renewable energy patents in urban as opposed to rural areas (IPCC
2007). Fast-growing clean technology initiatives in economic clusters and
city regions of innovation are a clear indicator that cities foster innovative
Figure 1.1 The Ecological Footprint of Cities
1,000
0.900
0.800
0.700
Sierra Leone
Cuba
Norway
Canada
Australia US
0.600
0.500
0.400
0.300
H
u
m
a
n

D
e
v
e
l
o
p
m
e
n
t

I
n
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e
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Ecological Footprint (global hectares per capita)
Human Welfare and Ecological Footprints compared
E
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s

b
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i
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e
r
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o
n
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0.0 0.1 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.0
Data sourced from:
Global Footprint Network
2008 report (2005 data)
UN Human Development
Index 2007/08
Africa
Asia and the Pacific
Europe (EU)
Europe (Non-EU)
Latin America & Caribbean
Middel East and Central Asia
North America
EU = European Union, US = United States.
Source: United Nations Development Programme. 2010.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 27
activities (UNEP 2011). Thus, in most countries, cities will be important
locations of the emerging green economy for several reasons. First, cities
are the home of innovators. Second, cities have the advantage of scale
economies in sectors, such as public transport, energy provision, and retail
consumer markets. Third, urban clusters draw in knowledge from universities
and research laboratories (Seto and Satterthwaite 2010).
The environmental performance of cities can be inuenced by a
combination of physical structure and green economy strategies. Compact
and densely populated cities with mixed land use will be the basis for a more
resource-efcient settlement pattern with high levels of economic output.
Urban form, size, density, and conguration can be planned and managed
to limit resource consumption and hence carbon emissions. Existing
design strategies and technologies can improve the efciency of building
construction, urban transport, energy generation, water supply, and waste
management systems so that they use less energy and natural resources.
Relatively higher population densities are a central feature of green cities.
This implies gains in energy efciency, as well as innovation through the
proximity of activities. Similarly, per-household infrastructure costs can be
lowered substantially as population densities rise. More compact cities
can reduce travel distances, and heating and cooling requirements, while
application of green transport modalities can reduce energy consumption.
More efcient use of energy leads to lower levels of energy demand and
hence carbon emissions. The spatial structure of cities can facilitate the
use of green grid-based energy systems, such as combined heat and
power generation, micro-generation of electricity through solar or wind
generation technologies, as well as rainwater harvesting and efcient waste
management. Thus, higher-density cities combine the benets of increased
productivity, innovation at lower costs, and reduced environmental impacts.
The conclusion of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC
2007) is clear: buildings, energy, and transport are the largest CO
2
emitters.
However, this means that these three sources hold the greatest potential for
mitigating CO
2
emissions, provided that green city principles are adopted
(Figure 1.2).
Sustainable urban lifestyles can thus be created through effective urban
planning and management, and lifestyle changes based on more efcient
individual consumption patterns.
As referred to briey, the inherent innovativeness of cities facilitates
their taking a lead role in the transition to a green economy. Compact and
densely populated cities based on mixed land-use patterns allow for a more
resource-efcient settlement pattern with higher levels of economic output.
28 Green Cities
Figure 1.2 Buildings, Energy, and Transport with Highest CO
2

Mitigation Potential in 2030
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
2.44.7 1.62.5 5.36.7 2.55.5 2.36.4 1.34.2 0.41.0
0
G
t
C
o
2
-
e
q
/
y
r
$/tCO
2
-eq
Energy supply
total sectoral potential at <$100/tCO
2
-eq in GtCO
2
/year:
Non-OECD/EIT EIT OECD World Total
Transport Buildings Industry Agriculture Forstry Waste
<
2
0
<
5
0
<
1
0
0
<
2
0
<
5
0
<
1
0
0
<
2
0
<
5
0
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1
0
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<
2
0
<
5
0
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1
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<
2
0
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5
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5
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<
2
0
<
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EIT = economies in transition, OECD = Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development.
Source: IPCC 2007.
Design strategies and technologies exist to improve the construction of
buildings, the efciency of urban transport, as well as the manner in which
energy is generated, water and other services are supplied, and waste is
managed. Such changes would reduce the rate at which energy and natural
resources are consumed. Because of the higher population densities of green
cities, energy-efciency gains are possible from the proximity of activities.
Infrastructure costs can likewise be lowered substantially as densities rise.
Thus, higher-density cities allow increased productivity and innovation at
lower costs and reduced environmental impact.
Increasing economic density, one of the features of a green city, has
been described by the World Development Report of 2009 as a pathway
out of poverty (World Bank 2009b). Greening cities can create jobs in
various sectors, including urban and peri-urban agriculture, public transport,
renewable energy, waste management and recycling, and green construction.
Empirical evidence suggests that economic clusters, or agglomeration
effects, are labor-intensive and offer many employment opportunities. Green
urban agriculture may involve the reuse of wastewater and composted solid
waste, the preservation of biodiversity and wetlands, and the productive
use of green areas and belts. Transport-related employment, typically
in decentralized small-scale systems, could provide many employment
opportunities. A shift from conventional to renewable energy sources may
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 29
result in new forms of employment in decentralized power generation, such
as installation and servicing of facilities. New waste management practices
of recycling and reuse have massive employment potential, as has been
well demonstrated. Lastly, many countries that have started to apply green
construction principles through retrotting of the existing building stock
such as Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United Stateshave
experienced a substantial increase in employment. New standards, such as
those for air conditioning, building insulation, water heating, and uorescent
lighting likewise generate employment on a large scale (section on green
construction).
Application of green economy approaches should be tailored to the
local context for it to be successful. It is important to note that while the
role of cities as powerhouses of the world economy, even within developing
economies, is undisputed (World Bank 2009b), so is their role in the greening
Box 1.1 Climate Change: Cities Are the Answer
Many of the worlds most difficult environmental challenges can be addressed
and solved by cities. This may come as a surprise to those who think of
environmental issues largely in the context of wild places and open spaces.
Cities, often congested, dense, and enormous consumers of resources, would
not be the place one might first turn for environmental solutions. In fact, cities
are inherently the greenest of all places. They are more efficient in their use
of energy, water, and land than suburbs. They provide transportation services
in a remarkable equitable and democratic fashion. Cities can help save natural
areas and open space by relieving growth pressures on the countryside. And
cities will be pivotal in fashioning solutions to the growing problem of climate
changeCarbon dioxide, the dominant greenhouse gas and the primary
cause of global climate change, comes largely from the combustion of fossil
fuels such as coal, oil, gasoline, and natural gas. Nearly half of all the energy
those fuels produce is used in buildingsheating, cooling, and lighting our
homes, factories, and offices. Another third of all the energy consumed is used
for transportation, primarily fueling automobiles, trucks, and transit fleets.
In order to address the challenge of climate change, it is imperative that we
make both buildings and transportation vastly more energy efficient. And cities
are the place to start. In a way, cities are the Saudi Arabia of energy efficiency
vast mines of potential energy savings that dwarf most of the supply options
The old paradigm of the pollution-filled city as a blight on the landscape and
the leafy green suburbs as the ideal is outdated and does not lead us to a
future of energy independence, clean air, and a stable climate. Cities are the
best hope to realize our need for a bright, sustainable, and promising future.
Source: D. Foy and R. Healy. 2007. Cities are the answer. International Herald Tribune. 12 April.
30 Green Cities
of economies and the environment. However, as they have to confront a
myriad of challenges, mostly because of rapid growth in population, income,
and unplanned built-up areas, they need to nd their own pathways to
becoming green cities. Given the wide variation in the economy, culture,
history, climate, and topography of cities, green city solutions need to be
situation specic.
A number of generic issues need to be considered when developing
green futures for Asian cities. These include each particular citys approach
to spatial structure, transport, housing, urban services, and technological
change. There thus cannot be a single model to follow. Instead, cities
should be selective in applying any of these universally valid principles and
approaches in shaping their own futures. Space and technologies will have
an important role. Technologies will be dealt with inasmuch as they affect
urban development and spatial planning.
The Spatial Structure of Cities
In generic terms, there exist only three principal city models: (i) the
monocentric city, (ii) the polycentric city, and (iii) variations of the second model
in the form of a conurbation of urban villages. A fourth model, which is the
composite model, is a combination of the three principal models (Figure 1.3).
The monocentric city model (model A) requires long-distance mass
transit systems because jobs and services are concentrated in the city
center. This creates high-level transport requirements, particularly since
a large number of commuters come to the central business districts from
distant suburban locations.
In the polycentric model (model B), mass transit is more difcult to
rationalize because businesses and jobs are less concentrated in the city
center, and travel and movements are more between or within subcenters.
In this model, private or small-scale public transport may dominate (Suzuki
et al. 2010).
The decentralized urban village model may lend itself to reduced travel.
The decentralized spatial model, often favored in modern master planning,
may contribute little to create harmonious space and transport relationships,
because it does not automatically lead to self-contained communities with
local residences and work places. However, in some cities, residents from
the suburbs continue to commute to the city center while a select group may
even travel in the reverse direction, from the center to the suburban regions
in pursuit of daily work.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 31
Altogether, the composite model, a combination of all the above, may
appear to be the most common in many urban cultures and nations. As cities
grow, particularly when not planned, the polymorphous city pattern may
prevail in many urban contexts and may turn out to be the dominant model
across those countries where planning is difcult. Decay of city centers and
peripheral urban growth have contributed to a proliferation of the composite
model in the real-world cities of the modern era.
This evolution of urban spatial structures in a rapidly urbanizing world
demonstrates that urban structure matters a lot. The spatial model and
existing densities generate trafc volumes and have a decisive impact on
the performance of cities. Spatial form and transport make up a nexus,
which, though well known, needs to be addressed as part of retrotting of
cities or in future planning (Kahn 2006).
In Australia, the size of houses and sprawl of suburbs have encroached
on the green edge of urban centers and agricultural lands alike, destroying or
degrading existing fauna and ora. The typically large houses have increased
carbon emissions due to their size and higher cooling requirements,
their embodied energy, and increased reliance on the motor car. These
Figure 1.3 The Most Common Urban Spatial Structures
Source: H. Suzuki et al.
The Urban Village Model
- people live next to their place of employment
- people can walk or bicycle to work
- exists only in the minds of planners;
never encountered in real life
The Polycentric Model
- no dominant center, some subcenters
- jobs and amenities distributed in a near-
uniform manner across the build-up area
- random movement of people across the
urban area
The Composite Model
- a dominant center, some subcenters
- simultaneous radial and random movement
of people across the urban area
The Classical Monocentric Model,
- strong high-density center with
high concentration of jobs and amenities
- radial movements of people from
periphery toward center
A
B
C
D
32 Green Cities
developments raise questions about the environmental affordability of such
settlement patterns and technologies (Fuller and de Jong 2011).
The opposite scenario exists in Singapore. Singapore has shown that
dense cities can be green, and has achieved this by building upward,
preserving land for greenery through compact high-density urbanization.
The compact pattern is said to have advantages for the provision of services
and in reducing pollution. [D]ense, compact, connected, and integrated
cities are in fact the most sustainable and green way of life in the future
(Chan 2012).
Why Do Spatial Structures Matter?
If the creation of green cities is the overarching goal, then spatial planning
and proactive application of transport models are required to achieve
efciency in the use of space and in the provision of transport services. This
direct relationship between urban space and the evolution of urban services
is highly relevant for the quality of future cities and how green these cities
can become.
The location of activities for work, business, and residence is essentially
determined by land-market forces and planning. Over centuries, planners
have tried different zoning concepts, and social-minded planners have
attempted to create proximity between housing and workplaces. Modernist
urban planners of the 20th century, led by the International Congress of
Modern Architecture, had a strong belief in the advantages of monofunctional
sectors in urban plans, but reality proved their abstract ideas unrealistic in
todays complex world.
1
In general, across many cultures, mixed land-use
patterns appear to have been the most successful and are likely to prevail
for centuries to come. However, as predicted by the modernists, the arrival
of the automobile has changed the functioning of cities.
Separation of land uses in modern cities may only be required to separate
environmental hazards from other land uses. If economic developments and
external conditions change, industries, trade, and business zones transform
more rapidly than residential areas. The modern age has brought mobility
and the need to commute long distances between residential locations and
1
The work of the International Congress of Modern Architecture has been closely
associated with the modernist Swiss architect-urban planner Le Corbusier. Since his
death, Le Corbusiers contribution has been hotly contested as the architecture values
and accompanying aspects within modern architecture vary between different schools of
thought and among practicing architects. At the level of building, his later works expressed
a complex understanding of modernitys impact, yet his urban designs have drawn scorn
from critics. One social commentator writes that Le Corbusier was to architecture what Pol
Pot was to social reform (Dalrymple 2009).
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 33
work. Modern cities and modern transportation systems are expected to
facilitate mobility. However, the concept of mobility varies across societies
with regard to what is acceptable. Ideally, planners say, nobody should have
to commute for more than 1 hour per trip, and any point within a metropolitan
region should be accessible within such a margin.
Land development patterns and transport modes determine the
functional performance of cities. The spatial efciency of certain land
development patterns is thus under scrutiny. Low-density urban development,
practiced both in the United States and in some regions of Asia, may be attractive
for those who can afford long and costly commutes. However, its efciency
is questionable. Beyond functional implications, the low-density development
model lacks inclusivity and fails to cater to the poorer or middle-income groups.
Low-density spatial development prevents easy access to job opportunities
and is likely to generate monofunctional neighborhoods and townships. It is
closely associated with privatized modes of transport and high-energy costs.
The recent increases in energy prices worldwide have already raised concern
about the low-density settlement pattern. The question currently being asked is
whether further increases in the price of carbon-based fuel will drive residents
away from sprawling suburbs. The trend seems to indicate that even middle-
income residents are evaluating the performance of this spatial arrangement
(Goodman 2008), leading many families in the United States and Asia to seek
residential areas in more convenient areas. In 2012, United Nations Human
Settlements Programme has also joined those who advocate densication and
who have pronounced for years that world class cities will need good planning
and that good planning will transform cities, introducing an education approach
to city leaders. The decisions on density, land-use and spatial patterns that
local leaders take have a major impact on energy consumption, CO
2
production
and cost of construction (UN-HABITAT 2012).
It has been rightly observed that the spatial structure of cities represents
a nexus of three fundamental factors: mobility, transportation-related energy
efciency, and affordability (Suzuki et al. 2010, 316). Existence of mass
transit systems is a precondition for many urban forms, particularly for
monocentric cities, which are now losing their dominance. As new town
developments in the PRC illustrate, the polycentric model is the favored and
more rational choice.
Monocentric cities such as Beijing (PRC) and Mumbai and New Delhi
(India) are increasingly relying on mass transit systems. However, more
dispersed cities like Bangkok (Thailand) or Kolkata (India) still struggle with
efforts to build systems that bridge signicant distances and inefciencies.
But even cases of some polycentric cities, such as Metro Manila (Philippines)
and Jakarta (Indonesia), demonstrate higher degrees of inefciency as road
space is insufcient and long-distance mass transit systems need to be
subsidized. Technological change has impacted many cities, such as Beijing
34 Green Cities
and Jakarta, where individualized car usage has become a dominant mode,
and the traditional use of bicycles and nonmotorized transport was driven
away. Cheaper cars, like the recently developed Nano, the low-cost car made
in India, the low-cost electric car in the PRC, and electric motorbikes and
bicycles, are likely to have massive impacts on cities. Their arrival may reverse
some of the recent trends favoring mass transit systems and may lead to new
waves of congestion through massive private car use.
Box 1.2 Density, Land Use, and Spatial Patterns Are
the Most Important Elements
UN-HABITATs Urban Planning for City Leaders (2012) has outlined the need to
make informed decisions on the preferred spatial structure. This concerns (i)
densification of existing built-up areas, (ii) extension of the city at the fringes
of the built-up area, and (iii) creation of new development by building satellite
towns.
Compact patterns are recommended because they can form a solid footprint
with medium to high densities and mixed land use. Compact patterns are
thought to improve accessibility, induce more cost-effective use of infrastructure
and urban services, reduce erosion of natural resources, lower business costs,
and improve social equality. Benefits of compact patterns include
better accessibility,
lower infrastructure costs and more efficient use of urban services,
preservation of land resources,
lower cost of economic transactions, and
social integration.
It is recommended to define and enhance public space. This means to
secure sufficient public space in advance and to plan a system of public
spaces and well-designed streets. The provision of planned green
spaces9 square meters per capita as recommended by the World
Health Organization and within a 15-minute walking distanceis seen
as an essential ingredient to improved environmental conditions.
A compact pattern adjacent to a public transport node has many benefits,
and a well-connected grid supports public transport and decreases
congestion. Thus, spatial planning can reduce the need to travel.
Source: Adapted from UN-HABITAT. 2012. Urban planning for city leaders. Nairobi.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 35
Regulating Spatial Development
Governments play an important role in regulating urban spatial development
and land development patterns through infrastructure development,
taxation, and land-use regulations. The government, however, is often not
the dominant force; instead, the real estate market affects developments
and sets trends. Despite this, the government can still either favor or
discourage concentration or sprawl. These choices are supported through
strategic decisions relating to transport systems or the development of ring
roads. Ideally, these strategic decisions are supported by regulations that
determine oor space indexes (FSI), or the density of built-up urban areas.
However, experience in India and other countries indicates that FSI
regulations have been inefcient in guiding and directing growth and
allocating land among alternative uses. Market forces, including factors such
as vicinity and location advantage, prevailed more strongly than permits for
higher land-use density. Yet, government investment in infrastructure still
impacts urban spatial structure and the real estate market. Interventions
that regulate FSI may be well intended as a contribution to urban design and
zoning, but many of these interventions fail to achieve their desired impacts.
In general, there are four types of land-use regulations: (i) regulations that
establish minimum plot or apartment size, (ii) regulations that limit FSI,
(iii) zoning plans that limit the type and density of land use, and (iv) land
subdivision regulations that regulate percentages of sellable land in new
greeneld developments (Suzuki et al 2010, 322).
Over recent decades, many cities in Asia have demonstrated that
residential densities have declined as incomes have risen, and that traditional
centers have lost importance as individual mobility has increased through
car ownership or improved public transport systems. In the PRC, urban
sprawl has become so accentuated that authorities have become alarmed
about the increased costs of these developments. Recent measures to limit
urban sprawl through development borders have not proven sufcient.
Few governments in Asia have achieved guidelines for optimal land use
and densities, though the Government of India has tried to use oor area
ratios (FARs) to regulate development. Over time, FARs have increased and
nancially optimum densities have been achieved when economic densities
were maximized. As many monocentric cities have gradually become less
dense and more polycentric, a signicant amount of workplaces and services
remain in the traditional centers, causing continued commuting and congestion
as in the case of Shanghai and Singapore. The number of trips may still grow,
even though governments seek ways to curb and reduce individual car use.
Singapore is a leader in the application of a congestion pricing system for
individual cars, which, like London, places a high price tag on travel to the
36 Green Cities
central business district. As cities keep growing, continued trafc congestion
may drive more and more consumers and employees to subcenters.
Despite attempts to dene optimum levels of FAR and FSI, there can
be no optimum value that is universally valid for all cities, or for the whole
of Asia. What has been observed over recent decades is that FAR and FSI
levels in many cities, such as Metro Manila or Mumbai, have been far too
low, leading to decay in the old city center, sprawl, and eventual nascence
of new subcenters that replace the old centers (Ng 2010, Hasan et al. 2010).
In addition to density criteria (FSI or FAR), there exist zoning plans that
regulate areas covered and can include regulations regarding plot coverage,
maximum heights, setbacks, and FARs. For greenelds, or new development
areas, zoning plans may be expressed in terms of land subdivision regulations.
These regulate the percentage of sellable land (commercial and residential
plots) as opposed to circulation space and open areas. The standards being
applied determine the chances for green development. Only high densities
in combination with the right means of green transport permit reductions in
commuting and individual trips.
Countries, such as India where populaton densities in urban areas
are relatively low, tend to generate more vehicular trafc and thence more
transport-related polution than do countries with higher urban populaton
densities. To demonstrate this, ADBs Green Urbanization Study (ADB
2012) compared the oor-to-area ratio of a number of Asian cities. The
ratio is calculated as the amount of habitable space within a particular
citys geographic boundaries measured in square kilometers divided by
the average distance that residents settle from the city center measured in
kilometers, higher values for this ratio indicating greater urban population
densities. While the oor-to-area ratio estimated under the study for Tokyo
was 20 and that for Shanghai was 8, the building restrictions enforced in
India caused the values for Chennai, Delhi, and Mumbai to be only 1. In
fact, only 12% of Mumbai residents live within 10 kilometers of the city
center, whereas 39%64% of the residents of Bangkok, Jakarta, Seoul, and
Shanghai do so. This illustrates the need for densication and higher space
efciency as a precondition for higher energy efciency of cities.
Standards that are too high and unaffordable cannot be implemented
and force people to seek solutions in the informal sector. For example, despite
the legitimate goal of regulating density through plot size, many standards
do not apply to poor households. As a trade-off, they may opt to escape
standards that are too high for them by moving into informal settlements that
are closer to job opportunities. Thus, instead of being a trade-off between
density and distance, it becomes a trade-off between legality and illegality.
It is therefore recommended that regulations should be tested using land
and infrastructure price models to establish the minimum household income
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 37
required to afford a minimum standard plot in a new greeneld development
(Suzuki et al. 2010, 326).
Dening the New Urban Landscape:
The Greening of Cities
Though cities can be land-hungry, smoke-belching, mass carbon emitters with
a massive ecological footprint, they similarly have the opportunity to apply
effective green economy development technologies that allow them to become
green cities. These green cities will transform themselves to achieve more
efcient densities and patterns of movement. Their conguration will limit the
use of natural resources and hence carbon emissions. More compact cities with
reduced travel requirements and availability of green transport technologies
contribute to greater energy efciency and better environmental performance.
Denser building typologies reduce heating or cooling requirements. More
compact urban structures result in better utilization of infrastructure networks;
thus, cities may be zoned in a way that combines green energy systems through
micro-power generation with sustainable use of natural resources.
2
Thus, sound
spatial planning and application of green technologies can have reinforcing
impacts on the environmental performance of cities (Figure 1.4). Numerous
technologies for enabling the creation of smarter and greener cities exist.
2
Environmental planners have focused on city planning as a means of developing healthy
cities and healthy citizens before green cities were conceived (Aicher 1998, Barton and
Tsourou 2000, and Brown 2009).
Figure 1.4 Inputs and OutputsA Systemic Approach to an Urban Context
across Sectors and Scales
Source: P. Duvigneaud and S. Denayer-de Smet, eds. 1975. L Ecosystme Urbain (quoted in
Raven 2011).
38 Green Cities
Resilient urban design can also be seen as an important passage toward
better managing the microclimate of public urban spaces, thus reducing the
need for managing microclimates through cooling or heating. Despite its
enormous potential for city adaptation to climate change, climate-resilient
urban design has not yet emerged as a major consideration in standard
urban design practice (Raven 2011).
Climate-resilient urban designs need to cover energy, transportation,
waste, water, green infrastructure, and natural resource systems, since these
are all parts of a physical urban network (Figure 1.5, Raven 2011). These
different scales are interrelated and equally relevant in achieving climate-
resilient outcomes.
Figure 1.5 Various Spatial Scales Relevant to Climate-Resilient Designs
Source: J. Raven. 2011.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 39
Building Competitive, Green, and
Climate-Resilient Cities
Rapid urbanization is continuing in Asia and the Pacic, with the pace of
urbanization expected to accelerate in the coming decades. New urban
growth in the next few decades will primarily take place in small- and
medium-scale cities and in peri-urban areas along existing and new growth
corridors. As many countries are initiating a new development phase that
takes development one step further toward a low-carbon economy, urban
development will make a crucial contribution.
The competitiveness of urban areas will depend on their investment in
urban environmental infrastructure, as well as improvements in their regulatory
frameworks and human resources. As urban development evolves as a new
approach to competitiveness, efforts will be directed toward harnessing
the potential of value chain development, export-processing zones, and
heritage promotion for tourism. As industrial development progresses, many
Asian countries are hoping to embark on the path toward green and clean
industrialization that can become one of the trademarks of Asias green
economy.
3
Clean technologies of eco-industrial development can lead the
way in this effort to take full advantage of new technological initiatives (mobile
communication networks, energy savings, fuel-efcient freight engines, low-
carbon fuel supply chains, and exible-fuel hybrid vehicles).
Climate change presents an added layer of complexity to the
development process, which requires multiple adaptation and mitigation
measures to cope with existing and future impacts (Figure 1.6). A green-
growth strategy is expected to contribute to making urban areas along
economic corridors competitive, green, and climate-resilient cities,
distinguished by more efcient allocation of natural resources, innovative
publicprivate partnerships or private sector participation, and creation of
green jobs and appropriate skills.
The move to make existing cities more energy-efcient is presenting
itself as a constant task of urban renewal and regeneration. Adaptive reuse
and retrotting, rather than demolition of existing structures and
neighborhoods, is likely to be more energy-efcient. Reuse and adaptation
will be the predominant approach to environmentally sustainable regeneration
and will help maintain the identities of existing cities (Steinberg 2008).
3
The Republic of Korea is a good example of this strategy (R. S. Jones and B. Yoo 2010).
40 Green Cities
Advantages of Compact Neighborhoods and
Mixed Land-Use Patterns
Compact cities with higher-density environments and efcient public
transport systems and neighborhoods that are walkable or cyclable are more
energy-efcient and reduce the energy footprint to a greater degree than do
lower-density sprawling urban landscapes (Newman and Kenworthy 1989,
Owens 1992, Burgess 2000, Bertaud 2004). Per-capita carbon emissions
are lower as long as efcient and attractive public transport is provided.
Highly concentrated urban areas produce transport efciencies. Medium-
sized cities tend to perform better than very large and very small cities when
it comes to public transportrelated energy efciencies. Compact and mixed
land-use neighborhoods also lead to mixed housing typologies and income
groups, a social objective that facilitates more inclusive development.
However, as Hong Kong, Mumbai, Seoul, and Singapore have shown,
densities cannot be increased indenitely. Experiences of crowding in public
housing complexes have shown that there can be negative behavioral
impacts of crowding (Wong et al. 2009). In many low-income housing areas
in Asia, densities have reached 3,000 persons per hectare (Ng 2010).
Figure 1.6 The Global Impacts of Climate Change
Source: J. Shah. 2011.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 41
Some cities appear heading in the opposite direction with reduced
urban densities such as Kuala Lumpur, which is slowly becoming Southeast
Asias Los Angeles. A recent report on Malaysia by the World Bank (2011a)
stated that there is a need for Malaysias cities to adopt more compact
urban forms and to start investing in smarter cities to improve livability and
attract talent. In their current form, each of Malaysias cities looks less like
a densely populated Asian city and more like a chaotic mini-Los Angeles,
with signicant urban sprawl and declining population densities. The World
Bank report cited the need for Malaysia to go green, thus following the drive
across the globe to create more sustainable cities.
In contrast, various cities in Europe (Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Freiburg,
Madrid, and Stockholm) and the United States (Portland), as well as in Latin
America (Curitiba and Bogota) have set their course to become green cities
and have prioritized compact development. The rich United Arab Emirates
(Masdar) as well as the PRC, with its various eco-cities such as Tianjin;
Dongtan, Shanghai; and Anting New Town-Jading District, Shanghai, are
now following suit (Figure 1.7).
4

4
Dongtan Eco-City near Shanghai, the largest of its kind, designed by Arup, the giant British
engineering company, was shelved in 2008. However, this does not alleviate the countrys
need for sustainable cities to accommodate the inux of people to urban areas (Brenhouse
2010 and Brass 2007).
Figure 1.7 High-Density New Towns in the Peoples Republic of China:
Shizimen in ZhuhaiEconomic Engine of the Pearl River
Source: Atkins. 2011.
P
h
o
t
o
:

A
t
k
i
n
s
.
42 Green Cities
The Eco-City
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Renmin University
(2010) dene an eco-city as a city that provides an acceptable standard
of living for its human occupants without depleting the ecosystems and
biochemical cycles on which it depends. Another denition of the eco-city
has identied it as an ecologically healthy city. Such a city is the result of a
healthy human ecological process leading to sustainable development within
the carrying capacity of local ecosystems through changes in production
modes, consumption behavior, and decision instruments that are based on
ecological economics and systems engineering (Wang and Ye 2004).
The development of eco-cities is tied to the three goals of eco-industry
(industry metabolism, life-cycle production, resource conservation, and
use of renewable energy), eco-scape (built environment, open spaces,
connectors, and maximizing accessibility, while minimizing resource use
and urban problems), and eco-culture (understanding of the balance
between humans and nature, and understanding of environmental ethics in
order to enhance peoples contribution to maintaining a high-quality urban
ecosystem) (Shen and Song 2010).
Others categorize eco-cities as eco-managed (e.g., new city, livable
city, healthy city), eco-built (e.g., landscape city, garden city, green city), and
integrated development (e.g., sustainable city, environment-friendly city,
eco-city).
Several requirements have been identied for low-carbon eco-city
planning. These include green energy planning; green transport planning
(modifying existing transport modes and introducing innovative green transport
options); promotion of green buildings; making industries more environment-
friendly; promotion of green consumerism through eco-friendly design and
production, as well as consumption; water management and conservation
through an efcient water resource strategy; and making public services and
infrastructure more environment-friendly, especially with regard to waste
management, management of air pollution, and wastewater management.
Masdar: A Prototype of One-Planet Living
When completed in 2015, Masdar will become the worlds rst
zero-carbon, zero-waste development city, while maintaining the highest
quality of living. Its master plan claims to meet and exceed One-Planet
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 43
Living,
5
a set of 10 guiding principles of sustainability, proposed in a joint
initiative by the World Wide Fund for Nature and the global conservation
organization Bioregional Development. Under these 10 guiding principles
of sustainability, all live within their fair share of the earths resources. These
principles include zero carbon, zero waste, sustainable transport, sustainable
materials, sustainable water, and sustainable culture and heritage.
As planned, Masdar City is expected to be home to 50,000 people and
to attract an additional 60,000 daily rail commuters employed in its planned
1,500 businesses. The project, which occupies a site 6 square kilometers
in area, is expected to cost $22 billion, which will be nanced by a mix
of government and private investment funding. Masdar Citys design is
based on the fundamental principles of low-rise, high-density residences,
sustainable transportation, controlled growth, and balancing of land for
energy generation with development that is consistent with the principles of
One-Planet Living.
6
Its designers claim that their designs are rooted in the
tradition of walled Medinas (historic, compact city centers). They thus have
used passive design strategies inspired by traditional designs in the region.
The citys low-rise, high-density compact design will encourage energy
efciency and use of recycling systems. Its permeable north wall will let
in cool northern breezes, and its narrow pathways will provide shade.
Building materials with a high thermal mass will considerably reduce energy
requirements, and its wind towers will be used for ventilation and cooling.
The citys design allows it to use a quarter of the energy required by
conventional city designs to reduce waste to a quarter and water demand
to a third of that of conventional cities. However, Masdar Citys design is
by no means limited to traditional strategies. In addition to its reduced
energy requirements, its remaining requirements will be fullled by on-site
generation. As part of Masdars drive to develop new energy sources, the
citys design will adopt a host of alternative and renewable energy sources.
Masdar Citys stone-and-mud walls will be covered in photovoltaic panels
and its pathways draped with fabric that converts sunlight into electricity.
The citys perimeter wall will form an intelligent outer shell, housing its
energy, environmental, and recycling services.
Electricity will also be provided by a mix of alternative and renewable
solar-power sources, such as the largest grid-connected photovoltaic plant
5
Principle number 1 refers to Making buildings more energy efcient and delivering all
energy with renewable technologies. http://www.oneplanetliving.org/index.html
6
Photo illustrations of the Masdar Headquarters are available at: http://smithgill.com/
work/masdar_headquarters/ and http://www.carboun.com/sustainable-design/masdar
-headquarters-the-rst-positive-energy-building-in-the-middle-east/
44 Green Cities
in the Middle East, a giant solar thermal power plant, a large wind farm on the
citys outskirts, and a waste-to-energy power plant. All of these facilities, as
well as the solar-powered water desalinization plant, will occupy no more than
10% of the sites total area. The solar plant is already being manufactured
and installed to ensure that the citys power requirements will be provided for
during its construction phase. The city is also to have the worlds rst CO
2
capture-and-storage plant and the worlds rst hydrogen power plant.
In addition, the compact high-density city is planned to be completely
free of cars. Cycling and walking will be the most common means of travel,
and will be complemented by a personalized rapid transport system with
a maximum walking distance of 200 meters to the nearest transport link.
An underground light railway transport system will link Masdar to adjacent
developments, the airport, and Abu Dhabi. The city designers have also
planned mechanisms for addressing the highly saline ground water, and for
capturing fog and humidity for use as drinking water. They are also looking
at measures for reducing or offsetting the carbon footprint of transporting
food to the city from outside.
7
An illustration of these integrated technologies
and features is shown in Figure 1.7.
The Eco-City Concept in the Peoples Republic
of China
8
The PRC alone houses more than 20% of the worlds population and is
urbanizing faster than any country in history. Its cities will require huge
amounts of nonrenewable materials, resources, energy, and water, thus
providing the rationale for green cities approach. In 2009, the PRC had 120
cities over 1 million population and 36 cities with over 2 million. By 2030, the
PRC will have an estimated urban population of 1 billion, and 221 cities of
more than 1 million (Lehmann 2009, 677).
Since its introduction at the 17th National Congress, the low-carbon
eco-city model has been touted ofcially as the answer to the PRCs
urban development, social, economic, and environmental problems. This
position is reected in a preliminary scan of PRC literature on eco-cities
and sustainable urban development, where the model is frequently cited
as the strategy for overcoming the PRCs myriad urbanization problems.
Some are high-prole international ventures led by the central government,
such as the SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City (Boxes 1.31.5), Caofeidian
Eco-City (Boxes 1.61.8), and Dongtan Eco-City (Box 1.9), while others are
7
8
The following section is adapted from Chia (2010).
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 45
driven primarily by local authorities and local entrepreneurs. Although the
idea of adopting ecological principles in urban planning had surfaced in the
PRC in the late 1980s, it was only in the last decade that eco-cities were
seriously considered and implemented as an urban development model. In
1995, the State Environmental Planning Agency, now renamed the Ministry
of Environmental Protection (MEP), issued guidelines for the building of
demonstration eco-communities and environmental protection model cities
under its eco-construction program (Liu 2009, Zhou 2008).
By one count, 135 cities or local municipalities were planning or
developing some type of ecological settlement (Yip 2008). The MEP also listed
389 counties and cities as approved national ecological demonstration sites
and 629 towns as environmentally beautiful towns (Wu 2009). In addition, the
MEP (2010) named 67 cities and 5 municipalities as national environmental
protection model cities in its efforts to promote environmental protection
by showcasing model cities. These efforts had served as a precursor to the
emergence of eco-cities, as MEP-accredited eco-cities were selected from
the more advanced eco-communities and model cities.
The PRC has chosen to frame the eco-city concept through the Utopian
ideal of an eco-culture. The concept of an eco-culture was rst ofcially cited
at the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of the PRC in 2007.
An eco-culture calls for the building of a harmonious world characterized
by sustained peace and common prosperity. Eco-culture, as dened by the
central government, is a broad concept of mutual respect for fellow human
beings, nature, and society at the material and spiritual levels. Human beings
are at the center of the eco-culture system but do not dominate nature. When
the central government introduced the scientic development concept as a
new development paradigm, the concept of an eco-culture provided another
way of articulating the central governments goal of establishing a well-off
xiaokang
9
society in which people are able to live relatively comfortably albeit
with modest means. The amended constitution emphasizes balancing urban
and rural development, and developing an innovative country and resource-
conserving, environment-friendly society. The eco-culture supports the
positive circular material ow (circular economy concept). The rst batch of
33 national ecological demonstration sites was announced in March 2000 by
the MEP. As of May 2010, there were 389 such sites.
The eco-city model can also be interpreted as a realization of the
PRCs dual-oriented society, which combines conservation orientation
with an environment-friendly society. Two challenges have been identied
in the implementation of a dual-oriented society (Zhou 2007): (i) the need
to internalize environmental externalities through government regulations,
9
Xiaokang society is a Confucian term.
46 Green Cities
whether these operate through market mechanisms, such as emissions
trading, renewable energy allowances, or through direct penalties, taxes,
and technical standards; and (ii) the need for a more robust regulatory and
implementation structure, as well as more comprehensive public education
on environmental issues.
In concrete terms, an eco-city is expected to provide a vibrant economy
by promoting environment-friendly production and industry that delivers
above-national-average per-capita gross domestic product levels. It is likewise
expected to deliver a healthy environment, effective environmental protection,
resource and energy conservation that meets international standards, a
reduction in emissions, high-quality air and water, an above-national-average
per-capita green ratio, social harmony with adequate educational and
employment opportunities, a social safety net, housing, public infrastructure,
public services, cultural protection of physical and nonphysical cultural
legacies, promotion of green lifestyles, and regional integration.
Characteristics of PRC Eco-Cities
Research in the PRC regarding dening, designing, developing, managing,
and measuring the performance of eco-cities has experienced explosive
growth in recent years. The term eco-city now appears as a catch-all phrase
for a variety of new urban development models. Although there has been a
proliferation of eco-city research in recent years (Shen and Song 2010), there
has been comparatively little research on the practical aspects of urban
planning as this relates to concrete eco-city development in the PRC.
Green Building Concept in PracticeJuiting, Peoples Republic of China
Source: Crone, Sydney.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 47
The countrys Low-Carbon Eco-City Development Report in 2010
describes a low-carbon eco-city as an innovative type of urban development
model based on the principle of balance with the natural environment.
Here, it is dened as a low-carbon eco-city aimed at minimizing resource
consumption and generation of emissions, while conserving energy and
focusing on environmental protection.
An assessment of low-carbon cities in the PRC identied three types
of low-carbon eco-cities: (i) the technologically innovative eco-city model,
which is usually neither replicable nor scalable and tends to require
substantial funding; (ii) the livable eco-city model, which is replicable and
sustainable, typically designed for population of up to 300,000, employs
green building technologies, focuses on developing service industries, and
emphasizes that urban planning is based on transit-oriented development
and green transport modes (e.g., walking, cycling, public transport); and
(iii) the progressive evolution eco-city model (or retrot model), which
refers to rehabilitation and renewal of old cities toward more sustainable
urban development (Qiu 2009).
The absence of a commonly accepted denition of an eco-city has
contributed to the proliferation of variations of the eco-city model observed
in the PRC, including the low-carbon eco-city model and the livable city
model. Other urban development models suggested by PRC planners are
the garden city, where the focus is on integrating greenery and landscaping
into the urban areas; the landscape city, which harmonizes the cityscape
with the surrounding natural landscape; and the historical and cultural city,
where conservation of historical and cultural sites within the city is a priority.
In addition, the MEP has an approved category of national ecological
demonstration sites, dened as administrative areas targeting promotion of
coordinated economic, social, and environmental development based on
accepted ecological and economic principles. Such zones typically promote
eco-agriculture; eco-tourism; eco-restoration; the integration of agriculture,
industry, and commerce; and attempts at employing the principles of the
circular economy.
While the characteristics and objectives associated with eco-cities are
varied, a crucial thread runs through these variations in the PRC context. It
is adherence to ecological principles, resource and energy management and
conservation, waste minimization, and recirculation of materials and energy
in an urban context that makes an eco-city. Characteristics of an eco-city
identied by PRC authors include harmonious relations and cohesiveness,
high efciency in energy and resource use, multifaceted approaches, zero
pollution, and continuous circulation of material ows.
48 Green Cities
Localizing the Eco-City
Variations on the low-carbon eco-city model and corresponding performance
measurement systems would be needed to match local conditions. Though
the eco-city model can be applied under two fundamental scenarios
greeneld projects and retrotting of existing citiesthere is no single
applicable solution. Differences in geographic landscape, for example,
would necessitate different approaches. Low-energy green buildings and
eco-friendly transport would be more suited in the southern part of the
country, whereas in the northern part, traditional heating could be replaced
with solar thermal heating and geothermal heating. In the water-scarce
western part of the country, water conservation and wastewater recycling
would be particularly important.
Clearly, industrial restructuring, and even changes in consumer behavior,
would need to accompany the development of eco-cities. Building an eco-
culture is the most difcult task for eco-city development, which needs
both top-down and bottom-up strategies (Wang and Ye 2004). The fact
that the central government has chosen to advance eco-culture as part of
its development policy suggests substantial hurdles involved in rening the
ecological consciousness of a nation. The government (Vice Minister of
Housing and UrbanRural Development) has conceded that the pathway for
eco-city development is still unclear (Guangzhou Construction News 2009).
A low-carbon economy necessitates low-carbon consumerism, and
this would provide opportunities for restructuring the economy and the
PRCs industrial base. The appropriate eco-city model for the PRC should
be replicable and self-sustainable in terms of the costs of both economic
development and operations. In the PRC context, an eco-city is not
necessarily a high-tech one, but instead one that focuses on the use of
appropriate technology (Wang and Ye 2004, MOHURD 2009).
Eco-City Standards in the PRC
In addition to local governments, there are primarily two central government
bodies engaged in the promotion, development, and evaluation of eco-cities
in the PRC. These are the Ministry of Housing and UrbanRural Development
(MOHURD) and the MEP. The regulatory and approval framework for the
development and construction of government-sanctioned eco-cities
appears to fall under the purview of MOHURD. MOHURD (2007) issued a
policy directive, which served to guide local planning authorities with regard
to key performance indicators for master plan preparation and monitoring.
These highlighted new resource management performance measures
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 49
covering water resources and reuse, land resources, energy efciency,
emissions reduction, and materials recycling (Annex).
On the other hand, the MEP accredits national-level eco-cities and various
other ecological demonstration sites such as eco-provinces, eco-counties,
and national environmental protection model cities throughout the PRC. Both
ministries are involved in the setting of eco-city performance standards. The
MEP recommends performance standards for eco-cities, eco-counties, and
eco-provinces. These standards, which were rst issued in 2003 and revised
in 2007, cover social, economic, and environmental aspects, with the highest
number of 36 indicators at the eco-county level, 28 at the eco-city level, and
22 at the eco-province level (MEP 2008).
The MEPs per-capita-based eco-city standards, such as annual per-
capita income, energy and water consumption, and the compliance rate
for clean production, have yet to be pronounced. Environmental indicators
include proportion of forest cover, proportion of protected areas, air- and
water-quality levels (per CNY10,000), municipal and industrial solid waste
treatment rates, noise pollution, per-capita urban green space, and level
of investment in environmental protection. Social indicators include the
urbanization level, the Gini coefcient (at the provincial level), and public
satisfaction with the environment. At least 80% of counties within the
administrative control of the city should meet eco-province standards, and
the primary city should have national environmental protection model city
status awarded by the MEP. Although local governments are expected to
lead such projects, performance evaluation and monitoring are carried out
by the local MEP ofces and reported back to the central MEP.
MOHURD embarked on a 5-year project when it signed an agreement in
July 2009 with United Statesbased United Technologies Corporation and
the PRC Society for Urban Studies to launch an Eco-city Assessment and
Best Practices Program in the PRC. The project is in its preliminary phase,
and a survey has been released to obtain feedback from various parties
on their perspectives regarding key performance indicators for eco-cities
in the PRC. The eco-city index system to be developed is intended as a
measurement tool to guide and measure the PRCs progress in eco-city
planning and development, as well as existing eco-city practices.
CSUS will also publish an annual report on best practices in the PRCs
eco-cities and propose policy and development strategies for PRC eco-city
planning and development. The MEPs standards have a broader scope
and include targets relating to energy- and resource-use efciency, as well
as measures of economic and social improvements, while MOHURDs
standards will likely focus on aspects relating to the construction of urban
50 Green Cities
infrastructure. This is largely a reection of the differing mandates of each
ministry. However, some aspects of environmental sustainability, such as
GHG emissions, utilization of renewable energy, and green transportation,
which are usually included in the development of eco-cities in other countries,
appear to be missing (Box 1.4).
Currently, no consistent framework of performance benchmarks by
which so-called eco-cities in the PRC may be evaluated. Ongoing eco-
city projects appear to be adopting their own performance benchmarks
and priorities, many of which may not be ofcially endorsed by MEP or
MOHURD, this potentially leading to uneven quality in the development of
eco-cities (GEF 2010).
Eco-City Case Studies
There are varying reports regarding the number and progress of eco-city
projects in the PRC. One count of eco-city projects at various stages of
development by Tongji University puts the total at 168 (Shen and Song
2010). The OECD (2009) report indicated that by 2008, there were about 60
cities in 22 provinces that announced plans to build eco-cities. The Joint
United StatesPRC Collaboration on Clean Energy puts the number of eco-
cities in development in the PRC close to 40 in 2009 (The Economist 2009).
By 2010, the MEP accorded eco-provinces status to 14 provinces, including
autonomous regions and municipalities, such as Hainan, Jinan, and
Heilongjiang, all of which have announced eco-city projects. Meanwhile, 11
of more than 500 cities (county and district levels) with plans for developing
eco-cities have been recognized as national eco-cities, eco-districts, and
eco-counties (Wu 2009). While a denitive answer regarding the number
of eco-city projects in the PRC remains elusive, this number is clearly
on the rise. However, there also exist cases of serious setbacks such as
the Dongtan Eco-City near Shanghai, which did not materialize despite
substantial support from the government and the private sector (Tianjin
Eco-City, Box 1.3; Caofeidian Eco-City, Box 1.4; Dongtan Eco-City, Box 1.5).
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 51
Box 1.3 SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City
Tianjin, the third largest city (population 11.8 million in 2008) of the Peoples
Republic of China (PRC), is developing the SinoSingapore Tanjin Eco-City
(SSTEC) in collaboration with Singapore. The SSTEC will be constructed
on non-arable salt land located in the Tianjin Binhai New Area, which
already has one of the fastest economic and demographic growth rates
in the PRC. By 2020, the 34.2 square kilometer SSTEC area will be home
to 350,000 people. The projects mixed land-use plan will accommodate
not only housing but also service-oriented, high-technology, environment-
related industries, which will create 190,000 jobs. This includes a large-scale
National Animation Center to be built during phase 1 of the SSTECs development
that will create jobs for 12,000 people.
The total investment cost for public infrastructure and facilities for the entire
SSTEC area will be CNY25.5 billion ($3.8 billion) according to preliminary
estimates. Construction began in September 2008, with completion of phase 1
comprising 7.8 square kilometers scheduled for 2015.
The SSTEC is intended to be an energy- and resource-efficient model eco-city
that will release relatively few greenhouse gases, while maintaining economic
viability and social harmony. Several features of the SSTEC are noteworthy. First,
it was selected from a pool of four candidate cities, with political support from
the Prime Minister. Second, it will convert nonarable salt land into urban land
with a high economic value. Third, by partnering with Singapore, the SSTEC
will avail of global experience and scientific knowledge. Fourth, its transport-
oriented development plan, which integrates transport with land use, includes a
higher floor area ratio allocation in the areas near metro stations, thus allowing
population densities approximately equal to those of the Tianjin city center.
Fifth, the SSTECs mixed land-use plan will reduce the need for workers to
commute from outside the SSTEC area. Sixth, its building standards require
greater energy efficiency than do corresponding national standards, thereby
promoting renewable energy use. Seventh, its planned per-capita water
consumption is capped at 120 liters per day, thus allowing more than 50% of
water use to be derived from nonconventional sources. Eighth, social harmony
will be maintained, since affordable public rental houses will comprise at least
20% of the SSTECs total housing stock. It is planned that 90% of all trips will be
made either in clean, energy-efficient public transport on foot or by bicycle.
Source: ADB. 2011b.
52 Green Cities
Box 1.4 Caofeidian International Eco-City
Located at the south of Tangshan, Caofeidian is a small alluvial islet facing
the Bohai Sea, about 80 kilometers from central Tangshan in Hebei Province.
The Caofeidian Eco-City is located near the industrial zone of the Caofeidian
New Area. The industrial zone was established under the jurisdiction of
Tangshan, with the zone being designated as a pilot site for promoting the
circular economy. Since 2003, more than 50 square kilometers (km
2
) of land
have been reclaimed for Caofeidians development. The People's Republic
of China (PRC) port construction, steel, and power enterprises, including
Beijing Capital Iron and Steel Group, Huadian Power Group, and Petrothe
PRC, are reportedly investing CNY192.9 billion in Caofeidian for construction
of infrastructure. Beijing Capital Iron and Steel Groups steel plant was moved
from Tangshan city to the Caofeidian industrial zone in 2007 as part of overall
plans for Caofeidian to become the largest steel production base in the
PRC by 2010.
The Caofeidian Eco-City is one of the largest eco-city developments in the PRC.
It is envisaged to be a new subcenter for Tangshan located on the seacoast to
help alleviate increasing urban pressures, while at the same time supporting the
areas industrial development. The first stage is expected to house a population
of 400,000 within an area of 30 km
2
. When fully completed in 2020, the eco-city
will be home to 1.3 million residents within its total area of 150 km
2
.
Launched in 2006, the strategic plan for the southern coastal area of Tangshan
was formulated in collaboration with the Urban Planning and Design Institute of
Tsinghua University, CAUPD, and the Shenzhen Planning and Design Institute.
Sweco, the Swedish sustainable engineering and design firm, likewise brought
international expertise into the projects concept planning. The areas master
plan is currently being developed by a team from Tsinghua University.
Eco-City Master Plan
The site faces a number of difficulties, including shortages of fresh water,
salination, and possible storm surge owing to its coastal location. The planning
framework used addresses these issues in terms of four aspects: biodiversity,
eco-shelter, eco-safety, and eco-repair. The master plan promotes eco-repair by
conserving existing green corridors and wetlands with buffers to protect these
ecologically rich areas from further damage. For flood control and prevention
of soil salination, two dikes were proposed with an inner sea formed between
the two dikes and an artificial lagoon. The lagoon would store freshwater from
rivers and mitigate salination of the soil and groundwater. The inner sea will
be used for recreational purposes, such as water sports.
continued on next page
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 53
Box 1.4 continued
The master plan for Caofeidian would also feature green transport modes
and transit-oriented design to create a city of short distances (Ma 2009). The
city center and subcenters would be served by light rail and bus rapid transit
systems, making the eco-city pedestrian-friendly and livable, while reducing
transport-related emissions.
For generation of electricity, wind power is planned to provide at least 80%
of Caofeidians energy requirements due to the citys coastal location. Other
clean-energy sources to be used include gas, as well as biogas from waste-
to-energy plants, which, in addition to wind, will primarily be used for heating
and electric power generation. Given the areas water-supply constraints,
water conservation and reuse will be heavily promoted with a target of 50% of
all water use being derived from reclamation and reuse.
Source: Adapted from J. Chia. 2010. How Can ADB Better Support the PRCs Sustainable Urban
Development? Selected Themes in Sustainable Urban Development in PRC. Intern Report.
Manila: ADB.
Box 1.5 Dongtan Eco-City
Initial plans for Dongtan Eco-City, the first eco-city project to be announced in
the Peoples Republic of China (PRC), were unveiled in 2003. Proclaimed as
the worlds first purpose-built carbon-neutral eco-city, Dongtans first phase
was targeted for completion in 2010 to correspond with the Shanghai World
Expo. Dongtan was also presented as a demonstration project for eco-city
development at the Third UN-HABITAT World Urban Forum in 2006.
Aside from construction of Chongming Island Bridge 13 which links Shanghai
to the mainland and a wind farm, Dongtan Eco-City has largely failed to
materialize for a number of reasons. As a result, Dongtan was not mentioned
at the Shanghai World Expo. Its site is located on an estuary tidal flat at the east
end of Chongming Island, which lies at the mouth of the Yangtze River, about
an hours ferry ride from Shanghai. The projects phase I, which was scheduled
to be completed in 2010, was to accommodate up to 10,000 residents in an
area of 1 square kilometer (km
2
). Targeted for completion in 2020, the start-up
area comprising 6.5 km
2
was to house 80,000 people, while the completed
eco-site to be completed by 2050 was to be home to 500,000 residents within
a total area of 30 km
2
.
continued on next page
54 Green Cities
Box 1.5 continued
Dongtan was envisaged as a small, pedestrian-friendly self-contained town
with an ecological footprint of 2.6 hectares per person, which is 60% less than
conventional PRC cities. Its energy demand was likewise to be 66% lower,
with 40% of all energy supplied coming from bioenergy. As a result, it was to
produce zero carbon dioxide emissions, and the proportion of its total waste
generated going to landfills was to be 83% less than in conventional PRC cities.
The project was perhaps ill-considered from the outset. Chongming Island
is the most rural area of Shanghai. Thus, its economic sustainability was
questionable in that it would most likely have had to rely on Shanghai for
most of its employment opportunities. Furthermore, displaced farmers were
not likely to be able to afford housing in Dongtan, even with 20% of dwelling
units designated as affordable housing. Management problems likewise
contributed to the demise of the project. According to one report (Brenhouse
2010), there was confusion between the citys design firm, Arup, and the state-
owned developer, Shanghai Industrial Investment, as to the source of funding
for the project, which was estimated to cost $1.3 billion (Cheng and Hu
2010). Political backing for the project also evaporated when Chen Liangyu,
the former Shanghai Communist Party chief, was imprisoned on corruption
charges in 2008.
The proposed eco-city was sited next to the Dongtan National Nature Reserve,
a Ramsar Convention wetland site. Thus, construction of an eco-city would
likely have had a significant adverse impact on the adjacent protected
wetlands. The Dongtan site did, however, have the potential to tap renewable
energy sources such as solar and wind, since a wind farm began operations at
Dongtan in June 2008. Eco-farming activities have also taken root at Dongtan.
However, participation by the local community was lacking, this problem not
being unique to the Dongtan project. The land-use regulations also posed
difficulties as the land on Chongming Island was originally intended as
compensation for agricultural land lost to Shanghais urbanization, and should
therefore have been used for agricultural production rather than further urban
development.
Source: Adapted from J. Chia. 2010. How Can ADB Better Support the PRCs Sustainable Urban
Development? Selected Themes in Sustainable Urban Development in PRC. Intern Report.
Manila: ADB.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 55
Location and Site Plan for Dongtan
Source: J. Chia. 2010.
DongtanAn Artists Impression
Source: Arup.
P
h
o
t
o
s
:

C
h
e
n
g

a
n
d

H
u
.
The PRC cities will densify, with about 1 billion people by 2030. With
the proliferation of new cities in the country, thousands of skyscrapers are
expected to be built, illustrating the drive for even higher densities.
Eco-city development in the PRC is still very much at the experimental
stage (Woetzel 2011). As can be gleaned from the case studies, appropriate
management and policies to drive and support eco-city development are as
important as, if not more so than, technology or nancing factors. For example,
managerial failures were the contributing factor to the situation in Dongtan. In
contrast, with the project being driven by a joint venture enterprise, the Sino
Singapore Tianjin Eco-City has strong political backing and a clearly dened
administrative and operating structure. The project also leverages expertise
56 Green Cities
from both the PRC and Singapore. Similarly, the Caofeidian Eco-City beneted
from foreign expertise. However, this advantage could also turn into potential
weakness if such collaboration falls apart. Moreover, since greeneld projects
are being constructed on undeveloped or underdeveloped land, it raises the
larger question as to how eco-cities can be replicated in existing urban areas
that are already well developed (Chia 2010). This articulates the question of
retrotting and transformation of existing cities and their gradual adaptation
of green technologies and green-economy mechanisms, as attempted in
Chongqing (Liu 2011).
Over the next coming years, India and the PRC will continue to urbanize
rapidly. Their decisions about land use will have a signicant impact on
energy consumption and carbon emissions. If they live at high densities and
use public transit, then the whole world will benet. If they sprawl, then we
will all suffer from higher energy costs and higher levels of carbon emissions.
One important reason the West must shrink its own carbon footprint is to
reduce the hypocrisy of telling India and the PRC to be greener while driving
our SUVs to the mall (Glaeser 2011).
While the PRC is experimenting with eco-cities on a large scale, other
East Asian countries, such as Japan (Box 1.6) and the Republic of Korea, are
venturing in the same direction.
Box 1.6 Kitakyushu, Japan Model Eco-Town

Japans Kitakyushu Eco-Town has developed the most extensive range of
recycling and environmental industries in the country in that these recycle
a wide range of materials and products. Current recycling includes PET
continued on next page
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 57
Box 1.6 continued
bottles, office equipment, vehicles, fluorescent tubes, medical equipment,
construction waste, solvents, paper, food residues, styrofoam packaging,
cans, and metals. The total collective investment for these activities was
430 million ($390 million, at 110 per US dollar), of which 82 million came
from national source and 56 million from local public source.
The following aspects are relevant to the Kitakyushu systems approach:
Supply. Recycling depends on obtaining sufficient raw material of acceptable
quality. This in turn depends greatly on citizens' cooperation in separating
waste. At the time of the eco-towns creation, preexisting collection systems
were not capable of delivering the required quantity and quality, and the city
of Kitakyushu thus worked with neighboring local authorities to establish a
sufficiently large catchment area to supply eco-town recycling businesses.
Markets. Although much of the recovered products are of low value (e.g., fuel),
where higher added-value markets have potential, the city acts as a green
purchaser (e.g., of clothes using PET-derived fiber, and recycled fluorescent
lights).
Local agglomeration. The eco-town demonstrates the importance of localization.
The local cement and steel industries allow low-grade recycled plastics and other
combustibles to be used for fuel, thus avoiding significant transport costs. A local
vehicle-recycling cluster has developed spontaneously at the Hibiki site, where
a group of car disposal companies have formed a cooperative that provides
common services to all of the local vehicle recycling businesses.
Regulatory interaction. Technology development has interacted with national
regulatory standards in a synergistic manner in the eco-towns operations. For
example, a shredder-less recycling process was developed for vehicles that
avoid the air pollution problems of standard recycling processes. This allowed
the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry to incorporate this technology into
a revision in the Auto Recycle Law then being drafted for the purpose of setting
more stringent standards for vehicle recycling.
Process innovation. Process development (learning by doing) in office
equipment disassembly has increased the recycle rate to 96% and halved
the time needed to recycle each machine. High-quality recycled plastics are
returned to the manufacturer to make new equipment, while low-quality
plastics are recycled into fuel. Experience in disassembly allows feedback into
materials selection and design, thus allowing the subsequent generation of
equipment to be designed in a way that optimizes resource efficiency over the
entire life cycle of the product concerned.
Source: http://www.city.kitakyushu.lg.jp/english/index.html
58 Green Cities
Green Transport
The metropolitan cities in developing countries are choking with trafc,
particularly with cars and buses, and are suffering from the impact of too
little regulation and too little enforcement of trafc rules (Agarwal, Sharma,
and Roychowdhury 1996). There have been many calls for alternatives to
the heavily car-based transport modes, including calls for a limitation of car
ownership and car movement. Singapore is an example of a city that has
invested heavily in public transport, while making access to the city center
by car more difcult and costly through its digitally monitored congestion
charge. However, for many cities, it is investment in green public transport
infrastructure that is being called for.
The dominant approach to green transport can be summarized by the
formula of avoidshiftimprove. This means improved spatial conguration,
i.e., more compact and multifunctional urban areas that would reduce or
avoid the need to undertake lengthy commuter trips. The notion of a shift
supposes that a gradual shift can be undertaken to modes of transport that
are cleaner, eventually utilizing nonfossil energy sources. The intention to
improve transport modes hints at possible improvements in energy efciency
and use of clean-energy modes.
Londons attempt to keep private vehicular trafc away from the city
center through a hefty congestion charge provides an excellent example of
the avoid approach to transport. Singapore has copied this with its electronic
road pricing system and a vehicle quota system that attempts to reduce the
use of automobiles in downtown areas.
The bus rapid transit (BRT) systems of Bogot, Curitiba, and Quito have
been imitated in Asian cities, such as in Ahmedabad, Guangzhou, Istanbul,
and Jakarta, with more cities working on their own versions of the BRT. These
schemes are still the vanguard of modern transport and represent a modest
level of investment in comparison with the more capital-intensive underground
metro systems of Beijing, Hong Kong, Kolkata, Nanjing, New Delhi, and
Singapore, to name a few, or the mass rapid transport lines in Metro Manila.
However, Asian cities have not tried to follow their European counterparts
in controlling emissions through low-emission zones and timed delivery
permits for commercial deliveries. Cities in temperate climates in Europe
and South America have experimented with cycling as one of the greenest
forms of transport,
10
but in tropical Asia such initiatives appear idealistic and
far-fetched as comfortable transport is associated with air conditioning.
10
Bogot, Mexico City, and Rio de Janeiro have car-free days and weekends.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 59
Busway in Jakarta, Indonesia
Source: F Steinberg.
Bus Rapid Transit in Lanzhou,
Peoples Republic of China
Source: ADB. 2010.
Since the car is still the dominant mode of private transport, much hope
is directed at innovations that will come from the industry. Hopefully, within
a few years, polluting carbon-intensive cars will be replaced with better and
cleaner technologies. The arrival of electric cars seems imminent, and their
supposed success is expected to initiate a new era of clean private transport.
While this will not solve issues of congestion and commuting, it will at least
help to clear the skies and will usher in a new era of technological innovation
with massive and still-unforeseeable implications. It is time that obsolete
carbon-intensive forms of mobility be replaced with energy-efcient vehicles
that use renewable energy sources.
Fuel conversion, as done in Delhi, can have impressive environmental
impacts. Switching the fuel used by a citys vehicle eet from petroleum to
compressed natural gas (CNG) can produce impressive reductions in air
pollution levels, as Delhis experience has demonstrated. However, few city
administrations have the political will to effect such a change. In Delhis case,
this obstacle was overcome by a Supreme Court decision in the late 1990s that
forced conversion from petroleum to CNG for a substantial portion of the citys
vehicle eet. Thus within a few years, 10,200 buses, 51,623 auto rickshaws,
10,350 private cars, 4,497 mini-buses, 5,043 taxis, 5,909 light commercial
vehicles, and 689 other commercial vehicles were all converted to CNG. As
a result of these developments, Delhis entire public transport eet is now
powered by CNG (Ferris 2012). In 2012, India introduced the rst hydrogen-
powered auto rickshaws, which will run on clean, efcient, and naturally
abundant hydrogen (Yee 2012). More cities in Asia and the Pacic are
expected to follow this example of Delhi. But to get started, it needs
committed leadership.
When the cities of Curitiba (Brazil) and Bogota (Colombia) introduced the
BRT systems, these motorized transport innovations were accompanied by
establishment of wide-scale networks of bike lanes, which have become an
60 Green Cities
emblematic side of a healthier, eco-friendly, green nonmotorized transport
option. This mirrors the experiences of many European cities where chief
executives, housewives, and schoolchildren ride bicycles as their daily
routines. This lifestyle is common in many modern cities and represents
multimodal transport options, ranging from nonmotorized cycling to the
use of public transport (BRT, metro, or an underground rail system), to
privately driven cars. The egalitarian nature of public transport, its quality
and affordability, has been praised at the core of its success. In urban Asia,
Singapore, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and, to a growing extent, the PRC
and India are following suit in matters of public transport. However, in the
hot and humid climates of tropical Asia, nonmotorized transport stands little
chance of becoming as attractive as it is in European or Latin American
cities that enjoy relatively cooler climates. Instead, a hybrid solution in the
form of an electric bicycle is expected to conquer Asia as its cities go green.
The emergence of cars that are fuel-efcient, carbon fuelbased,
and electric or hybrid (fuel-based or electric) is another indication of the
greening of urban transport. Modern industry standards have come a long
way from the heavy consumers of gasoline to more highly efcient cars,
and there is tremendous pressure to come up with innovative electric cars
that can compete in performance (e.g., speed and range of operation after
charging) with conventional fuel-based vehicles. The race is one, and the
likely winner is going to be the cities that will become greener and healthier
places to live in.
Electric Tricycle: Pilot Model in Manila
Source: ADB. 2010. ADB Today. 6 October.
The Hybrid Car
The fully electric car is still elusive.
Source: Asian Development Bank.
While some countries such as Singapore limit vehicular access to the
central business district by levying a fee for entering the urban core, other
cities have simply attempted to control speed and improve trafc safety in
downtown areas. In this regard, accident rates have been reduced through
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 61
the use of speed controls enforced by means of radar and strategically
placed xed-location cameras, as well as onboard cameras built into cars.
To reduce the overall volume of vehicular trafc, Guangzhou strictly controls
the number of vehicles on the citys roads by limiting the number of license
plates issued. Distribution of license plates takes place either through
lotteries or auctions, this trafc reduction measure being complemented
by the citys upgraded BRT system. Although this negatively impacts car
sales, it has resulted in signicant environmental and health benets for
city residents.
11

Green Building
Architecture in the 20th and 21st centuries has seen a dynamic evolution
toward ecological and green building. While modernist and post-modernist
architectural trends have waned, the trend toward green building has
become an important feature of the construction industry.
12
Environmental
architecture is now in an evolutionary stage that parallel[s] the growth of early
modernism (Wines and Jodido 2000, Jodido 2009). In reecting on green
design, the pioneering Malaysian architect Ken Yeang stated that Ecosystems
have no wastes, everything is recycled within. All emissions and products
are continuously re-used, recycled within, and eventually reintegrated with
the natural environment. This is the fundamental premise of eco-design Our
built environment must imitate ecosystems in all respects (Yeang 2005). The
issue of green building is a matter pertaining more to the building industry,
technologies, and vested interests than to engineering and architectural
design. In the case of asbestos, vested interests in the building industry took
decades to eliminate asbestos from construction markets in most countries.
However, unhealthy building materials are still produced and consumed in
large quantities (Miranda Sara 2008).
For about a decade now, governments in Europe and North America
have sponsored energy-efcient building practices in order to reduce
fuel consumption associated with heating or cooling. Energy-efcient
building design, including orientation, selection of heat-reecting materials,
optimization of solar benets, use of green roofs (and facades), water
harvesting, and sustainable urban drainage have become the mainstay of the
new green architecture. Decentralized electricity generation, mainly through
combined cooling, heat, and power systems at times linked together in
11
International Herald Tribune. 2012. [The Peoples Republic of] Chinas car producing hub
puts growth in back seat. 6 September.
12
Numerous publications have appeared dealing with biological or green building: US
Environmental Protection Agency (2009), Hopkins (2002), Allen and Iano (2008), and
Kennedy (2004).
62 Green Cities
decentralized neighborhood schemes, complement innovation in building
technologies. Londons Green Homes Program has nanced loft and
cavity insulation. In the United States, the Clinton Climate Initiative led to
the energy-efciency building-retrot program (Gavron 2009, 383384).
There has been a surge in energy-efcient engineering and
construction technologies, and governments have taken the lead in
designing tax incentives and stricter building codes for retrotting and
new construction. More so, the contribution of buildings to the CO
2

performance of cities is being recognized. Buildings contribute about
50% of urban CO
2
emissions through the construction materials used;
the carbon consumed in their manufacture; construction-related cooling
or heating requirements; the energy requirements of services, such as
water supply, wastewater, and solid waste disposal; and general energy
efciency. Addressing the energy demand of existing buildings is therefore
a high priority on the path to green cities. Their conversion to greener
buildings should start with building materials and later extend to internal
infrastructure, such as water supply, cooling and heating systems, and
their processing of wastewater and solid wastes (Philippine Daily Inquirer
2006). Passive design solutions, as already proven by many innovative
architectural projects, have helped to improve the energy performance
of buildings.
Green buildings are estimated to save on average 30% of electricity,
30%35% of water, and 50%90% of waste discharge costs.
13
More
has been done in the developed countries, but the developing world,
particularly Asia, is fast catching up. Green design and technology
inspired by biological forms and resource-efcient construction are
taking their inspiration from nature. Buildings that adapt to changing
conditions is the way we have to develop if we are to mimic truly the low-
energy ways in biology works.
14
Building codes, mandatory energy certication, nancial incentives,
and support, which have had a signicant and measurable impact on
building performance in Europe and the United States will reach the
developing world as well. Examples from Germany indicate that energy-
efcient construction standards have brought down average energy
consumption in housing by 80% (von Weizscker et al. 2009). Obviously,
the private sector has to lead this process, but the public sector can also
set important standards and examples by converting its own publicly
13
Yannik Millet of the Viet Nam Green Building Council, in Bao (2011).
14
M. Pawlyn, in Miles (2011b).
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 63
owned building stock into exemplary cases of green and energy-efcient
buildings.
The United Statesbased certication methodology of the Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is fast evolving as the new
benchmark for smart buildings, and across Asia the rst built examples
are being registered (Box 1.7).
15
The Philippines, for example, has one of
the rst Asian Green Building Councils, working toward sustainable and
net-zero buildings.
Box 1.7 Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
Green Building Rating System
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is a voluntary,
consensus-based national rating system under the United States Green
Building Council that promotes a whole-building approach to sustainability.
The rating system was created to transform the built environment toward
sustainability. It is developed and continuously refined via an open,
consensus-based process that has made LEED the most used green-building
standard. The first step in obtaining LEED certification is to register a project.
To earn certification, a building project must meet certain prerequisites and
performance benchmarks (credits) within each category. Projects are
awarded silver, gold, or platinum certification, depending on the number
of credits they achieve. LEED certification provides independent, third-
party verification that a building project meets the highest performance
standards. LEED-certified buildings are leading the transformation of the built
environment in that they have lower operating costs, increased asset values,
reduced amounts of waste that is sent to landfills, well-conserved energy and
water, and reduced greenhouse gas emissions. Often, they qualify for tax
rebates, zoning allowances, and other incentives.
Source: United States Green Building Council.
Due to the inclination of the Philippines toward United States standards
and legislation, the country has decided to follow the LEED pattern
(Gonzales and Torres 2010; De Jesus 2010a, 2010b; Salazar 2010, 2011).
As the movement toward green cities unfolds, so has a whole school of
new architecture, which is dedicated to the practice of green architecture.
In recent years, it has been stated that nobody knows what a sustainable
human settlement looks like or how it functions. Some people say that small
15
In the Philippines, the ADB Headquarters was the rst building to receive in 2011 a
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certication.
64 Green Cities
European towns in the Middle Ages, or prehistoric hamlets, for instance,
were sustainable. Both models, however, were based on the same non-
sustainable paradigm: resources were extracted from the environment,
while waste was thrown back. The fact that they were very small is what
made such settlements apparently sustainable, since disruption of the
natural environment was minimal (Ruano 1999 in UNEP 2011, International
Herald Tribune 2011a, Siegel 2011). In the past few years, there has been
a growing movement of examples of eco-urbanism, or cities that set out
to prove that they can become sustainable, as low-carbon or carbon-free
cities, with regenerative alternative sources of energy. Eco-urbanism denes
the development of multidimensional approaches to transport, energy, urban
greening, urban agriculture, and modern but passive energy architecture in
compact high-density communities.
Encouraging examples from the developing world are now coming up
in larger numbers: innovations in green construction are being worked on
in Bangalore, Bangkok, Beijing, Delhi, Guangzhou, Ha Noi, Hong Kong,
Jakarta, Karachi, Kolkata, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Mumbai, Nanjing, Osaka,
Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Taipei, Tokyo, Wuhan, and Yokohama.
Innovative projects are worldwide and manifest a growing global concern
for the green city that transcends political and cultural boundaries
(A. G. Siemens 2011, Heritage Magazine 2011, Wines and Jodido 2000,
Jodido 2009, International Herald Tribune 2007).
In a number of Asian countries, the real estate, property development, and
construction industries are moving toward green growth through application
of low-carbon technologies, energy-efciency initiatives of various types,
and installation of systems for mitigating or preventing oods. Manilas
property developers, in particular, have shown enthusiasm for participating
in the green building movement (Samaniego 2012a). While some developers
are quick to label green technology a new luxury (Arthaland 2012), others
refer to their new upmarket residential townships as sustainable eco-city
development (Samaniego 2012b). In countries with a building stock of
widely varying vintages, such as Australia, Europe, and the US, retrotting
of existing buildings is increasingly popular principally through modifying
buildings in a way that makes them more energy-efcient, and reducing
energy demand through the use of green roofs and facades. This trend
toward retrotting of existing buildings has been signicantly facilitated by
formulation of quantitative rating systems for measuring the relative energy
efciency of individual buildings. Examples of such rating scales include
the LEED system used in the US and Australias system, the latter holding
signicant potential for wide application in Asia and the Pacic (Green
Building Council of Australia 2012). However, the experience of initiatives,
such as the Philippines Green Building Initiative, suggests that a rating
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 65
system specically designed for tropical climates may be more appropriate
for region-wide application (De Jesus 2012). An example of a pioneering
building is Bangkoks 39-storey Peninsula, which has energy-efcient
features, such as a single-loaded corridor to the west to absorb heat and
daylight. It is equipped with a computerized integrated building management
system, a refrigerated garbage collection system, and wastewater treatment
facilities (De Jesus 2005). Through heat absorbing glass facades, the Zuellig
building of Manila will save 15% on annual energy consumption through
heat-absorbing glass facades. It will also achieve 71% water savings through
water conservation (Philippine Daily Inquirer 2011, Samaniego 2011).
In June 2012, the real estate rm CB Richard Ellis Philippines announced
that there were 2,371 LEED-certied projects in Asia. The leaders were India
(1,283 buildings) and the PRC (589 buildings), followed by the Republic of
Korea and Hong Kong, China (Salazar 2012).
The greening of high-rise buildings through constructing vertical
forests in the sky (Daily Mail 2011) or green skyscrapers (Yeang 1999) has
now become as fashionable in Malaysia as in Italy. Similarly, green buildings
have now become popular in both the Philippines (Samaniego 2012c) and
Viet Nam, the latters tube houses of traditional design now having gone
green (International Herald Tribune. 2012. 8 June).
Zuellig Building in Manilaone of
the Philippines rst certied green
buildings

Source: F. Steinberg.
Headquarters of the Asian Development
Bank A LEED-certied building
Source: Asian Development Bank.
66 Green Cities
The greening of architecture
Source: Agence France-Press.
Arya Residences, Bonifacio Global
City, Manila Working toward
LEED certication
Source: Crone, Sydney.
The new eco-cities in the PRC are set to become real-world laboratories
of green architecture (Ruan 2006, Alcalzaren 2010, Buban 2010, Associated
Press 2011, Wang 2011), and there is a new school of designers committed
to developing green skyscraperssustainable intensive buildings (Yeang
1999). ADB is sponsoring green buildings through a nancial guarantee
scheme with a bank in Pudong, Shanghai (see Box 1.8), thus opening
up dedicated credit lines for green building. Similarly, governments can
stimulate green building, as is done in the United States and Europe,
through tax breaks, or conditional bonus payments for retrotting that
increases energy efciency, or the use of green building materials or passive
energy-generation technologies. The PRC has been applying already on a
large scale energy-efcient heating systems in new buildings as in Tianjin
(World Bank 2011b) or in Sanxiang, Shanghai. Also, as part of the 2010
EXPO Initiative a demonstration eco-building in Minhang District, Shanghai
was constructed. The prototype of the case pavilion is a demonstration
eco-building in Minhang District, Shanghai. As the rst zero-energy building
in the PRC, it uses solar thermal equipment to provide energy for the entire
building. Green and energy-saving technologies integrate solar energy
into the building and make full use of rainwater, natural ventilation, and
shallow geothermal energy, thus demonstrating the concept of eco-housing
and the pursuit of livable housing on a universal basis. The building has
a shading system composed of shutters, French-window curtains, and
balcony awnings. Flowing liquids in the blue tubes on the wall can adjust the
temperature of the entire building. (Wang 2011, p. 303)
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 67
Energy-Efcient Housing in Sanxiang,
Shanghaisolar termal system
integrated in balconies
Source: J. Masic.
The Sanxiang, Shanghai technology
can be used for retrotting water
heating systems in existing buildings
Box 1.8 ADB Supports Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Lending
for Green Buildings
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is providing CNY300 million in
partial credit guarantees to Shanghai Pudong Development Bank (SPD
Bank) to support private sector financing of energy-efficient buildings
across the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). SPD Bank is the first
PRC partner in a program set up by ADB to encourage financial
institutions to lend to companies seeking to retrofit old buildings so
that they use less energy, or to construct green buildings that are
designed, constructed, and maintained so as to optimize energy and
water efficiency. Retrofitting buildings typically leads to energy savings
of 20%40%.
Source: ADB Press Release. 2011. Manila. 16 May.
68 Green Cities
Viet Nam Tube HouseGoing Green
This house in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) is a
typical tube house constructed on the plot
4 meters wide and 20 meters deep. The front
and back faades are entirely composed
of layers of concrete planters cantilevered
from two side walls. The distance between
the planters and the height of the planters
are adjusted according to the height of the
plants, which varies from 25 centimeters to
40 centimeters. To water plants and for easy
maintenance, the owners use automatic
irrigation pipes inside the planters. This
house is a unique tropical and green house:
Vertical Green because its facades are
lled with greenery. The green facade
and rooftop garden protect its inhabitants
from the direct sunlight, street noise, and
pollution. Furthermore, natural ventilation
through the faades and 2 top-lights allow this house to save big on energy
in the harsh climate of Saigon. The principles of the house represent passive
cooling principles and energy efciency, as earlier only known in the traditional
Vietnamese courtyard house.
Source: Vo Trong Nghia Architects, Ho Chi Minh City.
Energy-Saving Home for Kuala Lumpur, Birds IslandProject Proposal
Source: Graft Architects, Berlin.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 69
Construction Industry Going Green
The construction industry is an important economic eld, contributing
5%10% of gross domestic product in many countries. In most countries,
the construction sector has an oversized ecological footprint. It is estimated
by UNEP (2011b, 328371) that the construction sector is actually the single
largest global GHG emitter, with about one-third of global energy used in
buildings. Even with regard to other environmental impacts, construction
has a large footprint, with 12% of all freshwater being consumed and 40%
of solid waste originating from it.
With the expected upsurge in urban expansion and the need for new
cities and some million homes in 2010, developing countries have a unique
opportunity to enter into efcient and green construction, while expanding
their building stocks. From 2010 to 2050, worldwide investment in buildings
will range from $300 billion to $1 trillion (depending on assumptions used) per
year (UNEP 2011b). This includes new construction and retrotting of existing
building stocks. Creating more energy- and resource-saving buildings could
result in about one-third savings in energy consumption and transport costs
(International Herald Tribune 2011d, Medina 2012). As a result, the Holcim
Foundation of the Swiss cement producer Holcim has created an award for
sustainable construction in Asia, to celebrate innovative future-oriented and
tangible sustainable construction projects.
16
In 2012, it awarded a design
of retail and commercial building by green architect Kenneth Yeang of
Malaysia, and an Urban Farm Barn in Bangkok, Thailand.
Retail and Commercial Building in Putrajaya, Malaysia
Source: www.holcimawards.org/apac
16
www.holcimawards.org
70 Green Cities
The greening of the construction sector will have signicant impacts on
labor and income opportunities. The UNEP report estimated that in Europe
and the United States alone, an additional 3.5 million green jobs can be
generated by switching to improved energy efciency in construction, in both
new construction and retrotting. This includes resource-efcient building
materials and appliances, expanded use of renewable energy sources,
and services including recycling and management of construction wastes.
The greening of the building industry in developing countries provides new
opportunities for engaging microenterprises and the informal sector. It could
also improve working conditions and enhance the skill proles of skilled
construction labor and others in the building profession, such as electricians,
energy specialists, facility managers, civil engineers, and architects.
The greening of building industry practices, and the use of more healthy
biological materials can also add health benets that improve livability and
productivity. In many countries, indoor pollution from poorly combusted
solid fuels (e.g., biomass, coal, kerosene) combined with poor ventilation
is a signicant contributor to illness and premature death. Pneumonia and
tuberculosis, which are often linked to indoor pollution, cause about 11% of
all human deaths globally each year. Women and children tend to be more
at risk due to higher daily exposures.
The greening of construction can also be achieved through the
innovative use of recycled products as building materials. In Hong Kong, a
glass-recycling rm produces bricks from recycled glassware. In 2010, the
Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the Peoples
Republic of China allowed the use of these bricks for pavements (Wassener
2012). While moves toward acceptance of recycled materials seems slow,
this is an important start in that it suggests that other product innovations
may follow.
Energy
Cities are consumers of energy, and they typically obtain energy from distant
locations. Lighting, heating, air-conditioning, and other uses of electricity
consume more than half the worlds energy, with a further quarter consumed
by vehicles and other forms of transport. With 75% of energy consumption,
cities contribution to global pollution is also signicant (Battle 2009) For
some, the challenge is to reduce energy consumption by cities and to link
them with the production of energy from renewable sources. The recent
evolution of renewable energy technologies has posed the question as to
whether cities have the potential to become more independent from distant
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 71
sources of energy, and whether they could become producers of their own
energy (Grubler and Fisk 2012).
Micro-generation of renewable energy through wind-power devices
(Galbraith 2011) or solar-power technologies are being discussed for urban
applications, and combined heating (or cooling) plants are being assessed
in combination with decentralized energy plants (Edwards 2010, Powers
2010, Jenkins 2012). Rizhao City in the PRC already uses solar power for
water heating in 99% of all households (ICLEI, UNEP, and UN-HABITAT
2009, Plafker 2010). In Malaysia, many examples can be found of energy-
efciency innovation in ofce buildings and even in shopping malls, which
have reintroduced fans for cooling in order to promote a greener lifestyle
(New Straits Times 2011).
Innovation is also required in the context of home appliances. These
are under scrutiny for their energy performance. This covers particularly air
conditioners and cooling devices like fridges but also improved cooking
devices. With demand for cooling devices skyrocketing in countries such
as India and the PRC, developing nations have become dominant sources
of CO
2
emissions, and of late the coolant gas HCFC-22, which is heating
up the planet. Similarly, refrigerators are known for their high levels of CO
2
emissions. The electrical home appliance industries have been working for
years to develop ozone-friendly air conditioners, but efforts to regulate the
negative impacts of traditional coolants used in air conditions on the earths
ozone layer have led to uncontrolled global warming through widespread
use of the coolant gas HCFC-22.
The Montreal Protocol originally gave developing countries until 2040 to
get rid of HCFCs, but in 2007 the timetable was accelerated. Now HCFC gas
emissions are intended to be stabilized by 2013 and reduced by 2015, which
would imply a 40% reduction in consumption. Meeting these targets will be
hard to achieve since technological innovation is still lagging (International
Herald Tribune 2012). Cooking devices, particularly those used by poor
urban households, remain largely carbon-based and contribute substantially
to air pollution and pollution-related health risks. After waterborne diseases,
pollutants from carbon-based cooking devices rank as the second leading
cause of death among many poor urban inhabitants. Innovations, such as
creating solar stoves or energy-saving healthy cooking devices, have been
worked on for years, and experimental work on such devices continues
(Smith et al. 2007).
72 Green Cities
Renewable Energy in the City
Source: S. Lehmann. 2009.
Renewable Urban Energy Options
E
Network
management
system
Biomass
power plant
Block-type
cogeneration
power plant
PV system
Fuel cell
Wind farm
Distributed loads
Achievable, realistic renewable energy targets for eco-districts
Coutesy: Siemens, 2009
Distributed mini block-type
cogeneration and
photovoltaic systems
Energy
management
system
Energy
exchange
Invoicing
Concentrator
Communications network
Weather service
Remote meter
reading
Infuenceable
loads
communications
unit
Few cities are being supplied by nearby power plants, or derive a
signicant portion of the energy they use from renewable sources. Manila
receives about 7% of its electricity from geothermal sources (ICLEI, UNEP,
and UN-HABITAT 2009), while other reliable and low-cost sources are being
explored for other cities. In Germany, decentralized energy production has
become ofcially accepted, with surplus energy being sold to the common
grid. Other form of emerging energy-efciency measures is district heating,
as practiced in the cities of the PRC and Mongolia. Better networking and
transfers of locally generated low-carbon energy will have great relevance
for the cities of the future.
In 2011, in the aftermath of the Japan earthquake and tsunami and
atomic energy disaster, much interest was focused on wind energy as a
source of renewable energy. While debating its nancial feasibility, technology
developers continue to work on wind power, which will transform not only
Asias countryside but also its cities.
Building energy-efcient homes for low-carbon cities in the PRC has
become the approach taken under a recent project funded by the World
Bank and the Global Environment Fund that aims at modernizing heating
systems and energy efciency in urban homes. Heating is vital to surviving
winters in the northern PRC, where temperatures can plunge to 30C. Most
of the heating systems there are red by coal and are thus centralized and
inefcient with poor emission controls. Buildings also lack proper insulation.
Furthermore, there is little incentive for people to cut energy consumption,
since their energy bills are determined by the size of their apartment not by
how much energy they use. On average, residential buildings in the PRC
use twice as much energy to heat than homes in Europe or the United
States where temperatures drop to the same level as the PRCs. The project
referred to above will (i) improve enforcement of energy-efciency standards
for buildings, as well as the design and use of insulation and other energy-
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 73
saving measures; (ii) implement heat metering, cost-based pricing, and
consumption-based billing; and (iii) modernize heat supply systems so that
residents can control the heat being turned on or off (World Bank 2011).
17
Solar Energy
Photovoltaic Roof Elements
Source: Agence France-Press.
Wind Energy
Energy-Efcient Lighting
17
www.worldbank.org/en/new/2011/11/09/building-energy-efcient-homes-for-low-carbon
-cities-in-china
74 Green Cities
Toward Carbon-Neutral Cities: Glass Facades as
Solar Panels
A major challenge remains in converting existing glass facades into sources
of energy. Development of solar panels as integral parts of glass facades
is expected to revolutionize our cities, their energy consumption patterns,
and thus their ecological footprints. Glass facades of the future will not only
transmit energy but become sources of energy generation as well. Once
glass facades become solar panels that convert solar energy into electricity,
it will be possible to create carbon-neutral buildings that not only can
generate their own energy but can produce energy in excess of their own
consumption as well. This excess energy would then be fed into national
electric grids and ultimately be used to power public infrastructure such as
street lighting, or even the movement of private electric cars.
This would revolutionize our perception of glass facades, which are
currently seen as a major source of energy waste in urban areas. Additional
features, such as ray-absorbing glass panes, will help reect the sun rays
outward, thus lowering energy requirements in such buildings during warm
weather (Box 1.9).
Box 1.9 Wuxi Suntech Solar Photovoltaic Research
and Development Center
Early 2009 saw the inauguration of the Wuxi Suntech Solar Photovoltaic
Research and Development Center, which is the first zero-energy building
in the Peoples Republic of China. As a world market leader in solar energy
industry, Suntech offers affordable energy conservation solutions.
The newly built center has a total area of 64,000 square meters, and features
facades that incorporate 20,000 square meters of photovoltaic materials that
collect solar energy and transform it for use in the daily operation of the
building.
Source: www.suntech.com
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 75
Photovoltaic Window Panes
Amsterdam Airport
Source: Agence France-Press.
Revolutionary Technology: The
Solar Panel Double Facade
Source: Agence France-Press.
ADB Headquarters in Manila: Solar
Panels on Roof Top
Source: F. Steinberg.
ADB Headquarters in Manila: Solar
Panels on Roof Top
Source: Asian Development Bank.
Solar Architecture in the Green City Freiburg, Germany
Source: Agence France-Press.
76 Green Cities
Water and Wastewater
Cities are large users of water drawn from surrounding hinterlands. Many
developing countries not only have a large demand for water, but their
consumption patterns result in unintended wastage through water losses.
Known as non-revenue water, such losses include all water that enters
municipal water supply systems and not paid for by users. The extent
of such losses is large in that an estimated 30%50% of business
opportunities are foregone in many cities of Asia and the Pacic.
18
However,
Tokyo and Phnom Penh are examples of cities that have successfully reduced
water losses, largely through volumetric water charges and meticulous
maintenance of networks.
Measures for decreasing the utilization of fresh water include
implementation of a cascading approach in which lower quality, semitreated
wastewater is used for watering public parks and greenery. Singapore
introduced its active, beautiful, and clean waters design guidelines (Public
Utilities Board 2009), which offered design options for cleaning and using
rainwater in biotopes and water bodies. Harvesting rainwater for drinking
or nondrinking uses are examples of resource management measures
that maximize water-use efciency. For example, in New Delhi, buildings
with roof areas larger than 100 square meters and plots greater than 1,000
square meters are required to harvest rainwater. An estimated annual
harvest of 76,500 million liters of rainwater in Delhi could be made available
for recharging groundwater resources in this manner (ICLEI, UNEP, and
UN-HABITAT 2009). In Chennai, recharging raised city groundwater levels
by 4 meters (Sakthivadivel 2007).
Similar reductions in water use can be accomplished through new
technologies, such as waterless urinals and toilets. In poor households,
about 50% of water consumption is accounted for by toilet ushing. While
waterless urinals have already been developed and are being tested in public
buildings, they have yet to be down-marketed to the homes and settlements
of the urban poor. Thus, the challenges of reducing energy consumption in
water distribution and adaptation to climate change offers new business
opportunities for future entrepreneurs (Gies 2011).
Flushing toilets with less or no water is one of the concrete challenges
which cities are facing today. In poor households, about 50% of water
consumption is for toilet ushing. While waterless urinals have already been
developed and are being tried out in public buildings, these have yet to be
down-marketed to homes. Creative solutions are being awaited.
18
An estimated $10 billion worth of treated water is lost every year from Asias towns and
cities. See International Herald Tribune (2011b).
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 77
Waste Management
Modern lifestyles and increasing wealth in Asia and the Pacic have resulted
in rapid expansion of waste streams. This has had a major adverse impact
on the urban hinterland, as cities export their waste to outlying rural and less-
developed areas. In recent years, considerable attention has been devoted
to addressing waste management issues, with the use of sanitary landlls
becoming a universal goal of Asian cities. Cities such as Singapore have
opted for high-tech solutions such as waste incineration. However, more
cost-effective waste management practices through recycling are currently
being mainstreamed.
The long-term vision of some waste management companies is that
of (i) using 100% recycled or renewable materials for packaging, (ii) zero
consumer and manufacturing waste going to landlls, and (iii) products that
maximize resource conservation (Procter & Gamble 2011, De Jesus 2006).
After decades of informal sector waste picking, waste segregation, and
waste recycling, these practices are now considered important elements of
the development of green cities.
Since 2005, ADB has supported the 3R principle (reduce, reuse, recycle).
19
This means providing storage facilities and markets for compost and recyclable
materials and encouraging community-based waste processing and recycling
initiatives. Recycling in urban areas remains relatively limited. For example,
only 4%6% of the total amount of solid waste generated in Manila is recycled.
However, development of green cities will require that recycling forms an
important part of local government solid waste management plans, and that
these plans are supported by materials recovery facilities that allow hygienic
separation and processing of recyclable articles. Some European cities such
as Copenhagen have made dramatic progress in recycling, with only about
3% of the total amount of waste generated being dumped in sanitary landlls.
This suggests that in addition to increasing the efciency of resource use,
well-organized recycling programs can also dramatically reduce the amount of
waste that must be dumped into landlls. However, achieving this will require
progress in the degree to which recycled and biodegradable materials are
used in manufacturing consumer goods.
20
In short, a combination of product
19
The initiative was launched in 2005 in Tokyo, based on an agreement of the Group of 8
industrialized nations to promote more efcient production and consumption and
environmental conservation (ADB 2007).
20
As urban consumption patterns have created new forms of waste from electrodomestic articles,
computers and cellphones, it is important to devise good and healthy use of obsolete and
discarded e-waste which contains elements of primary materials like gold, silver, copper, and
rare earths. The growing availability of these minerals has provoked the term urban mining. In
the PRC, just one years mobile phones and computers generated e-waste which have a value
of 4 tons of gold, 28 tons of silver, and 6,000 tons of copper (De Jesus 2012b).
78 Green Cities
design and lifestyle changes will be required to bring us closer to the ideal of
the zero-waste city (Zaman and Lehmann 2011).
Vegetation and Landscape
Cities are usually not perceived as a necessary series of green outdoor spaces
for air circulation and recreation. But if well planned, about 10%20% of a citys
space can be public green areas. Some cities such as Bangkok and New Delhi
have maintained a signicant amount of open green space, while others such
as Tokyo and Manila hardly have any open areas remaining. Singapore, on the
other hand, has increasingly developed parks and open green areas. The citys
new land reserve located at Marina Bay, partially on land reclaimed from the sea,
provides but one example of this trend. Similarly, Singapore is developing new
green vertical buildings that maximize the amount of foliage to which occupants
are exposed (Architecture and Urbanism 2012). These open spaces act as
green lungs that lter air pollution in addition to absorbing rain and wastewater.
Parks, gardens, street greenery, and trees can effectively act as carbon storage,
water regulation, and ltration facilities, thus playing a positive role in ood
control efforts. As such, open green spaces are an important urban asset
and have an important role in maintaining the health of urban ecological systems.
However, with the quest for higher urban densities and increases in
sellable and usable land, the days of conventional city parks seem numbered.
To compensate for this loss, architects and engineers have been developing
facade greenery and hanging gardens, rooftop garden terraces, and green-
grass roofs.
Manhattan, New York, Rooftop
GreeningIdeal For Heat Absorption

Source: S. Lehmann. 2009.
Grass Roong: Science Museum,
San Francisco
Source: F. Steinberg.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 79
Green Facade: Quay Branly Museum,
Paris
Source: F. Steinberg.
Green Roof UNESCO Building,
Paris
Source: F. Steinberg.
Green landscaped areas help regulate and mitigate urban temperature
extremes. Urban vegetation and open spaces help decrease storm water
volumes and thence oods. New design strategies in cities such as Beijing
and Tokyo (Box 1.10), as well as in Italy (Box 1.12) have promoted green
curtains around public buildings and private homes to avoid overheating of
buildings in summer and to limit the need for air conditioning.
Green Facade in EuropePassive
Climate Control
Source: Agence France-Presse.
Green Facade in Manila
Source: F. Steinberg.
80 Green Cities
Box 1.10 Green Roofs in Beijings Central Business District
The accelerated urbanization process in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC)
has increased pressure on the environmental quality of cities, leading citizens
to demand not only economic development but also a better quality life. This
includes better air quality and more leisure space, especially in the central
business districts (CBDs) of major cities. In the case of Beijing, despite the
citys having a green coverage ratio of 45%well above the average green
ratio of 30% in most of the countrys citiesits CBD has limited green area
coverage. Beijing municipality is trying to solve this problem by promoting
the use of green roofs that also help mitigate climate change impacts and
improve environmental quality. Beijing municipality is using both regulatory
instruments and policies in promoting green rooftops and the greening of city
walls. Regulatory instruments are mainly used in public offices, educational
buildings, and sanitation and other infrastructure facilities. Regulations include
compulsory inclusion in new public buildings of a certain percentage of green
Vertical Greening in Singapores
Marina Bay Gardens
Source: Agence France-Press.
Green Roof on Rockefeller Center,
New York
Source: Agence France-Press.
continued on next page
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 81
Urban Farming
Urban farming, an old topic of the ecologists of the 1970s, is making a
comeback but this time with more technology and sophistication. While many
of the urban agriculture experiments have emerged as means to address food
security and the agricultural crisis, many of them today incorporate bolder
environmental targets that include CO
2
capture and city greening (Bakker et
al. 2000, Mollison and Holmgren 1978, The Economist 2010). Vertical farming
is back and is being experimented with in Europe, Republic of Korea, and the
United States (Boxes 1.111.12, Baum 2011).
Some agricultural experts argue that building indoor farms in urban
areas will help ensure a reliable food supply for a growing global population.
While it is true that vertical farms could theoretically feed billions of people
and release food production from dependence on weather patterns and the
necessity of long-distance transport of food, the current energy requirements
of vertical farming vastly exceed those of conventional farming. This makes
price competitiveness of indoor farming dependent on signicant expansion
of renewable solar- or wind-generated energy delivered at prices comparable
to those of nonrenewable sources.
Nevertheless, providing food for the earths projected population of
9 billion in 2050 will no doubt require a revolution in agricultural production
of one type or another, which suggests that use of vertical farms may be
given increasing attention by policy makers concerned with national food
security. The Government of the Republic of Korea is currently exploring
the use of vertical farms as a way of feeding an expanding population in the
Box 1.10 continued
roofs or walls, as well as the use of green infrastructure solutions. Compliance
with these measures is checked when building permits are applied for.
In 2005, the city issued local standard green roof specifications (DB2005/
11-23) that indicated the basic requirements for green roofs, planting designs,
and plant selection. The main bottlenecks identified in promoting green roofs in
Beijing were regulations and techniques that are still relatively immature in the
PRC, green-roof policies and subsidies that focus only on public buildings, and
lack of coordination among various city departments that promote construction
of green roofs. Thus far, few private green roof projects exist in Beijing. If the
government wants to expand the citys green roof coverage, particularly in the
CBD, it needs to focus on the considerable potential market that the private sector
offers by opening up the green roof subsidy scheme to private sector enterprises.
Source: J. Wang 2011.
82 Green Cities
face of the countrys relatively short growing season and limited amount of
uncultivated arable land. The vertical farm laboratory in operation in Suwon
is currently testing vertical farming technologies, the major constraint to
expansion of production being efciently replacing sunlight with articial
light, for example, through the use of light emitting diodes (Der Spiegel
2011). Vertical farming is being developed for Bangkok through an Urban
FarmUrban Barn project (www.holcimawards.org/apac), and rooftop
farms ourish high above Hong Kong (Hui 2012).
Box 1.11 Urban Agriculture
Urban Agriculture on the Mekong River Kaysone Phomvihane, Lao Peoples Democratic Republic.
Source: F. Steinberg.
Box 1.12 Urban Farming Going Vertical and High-Tech
Source: Kenn Brown Monolithic Studios.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 83
Box 1.13 Vertical farms
Vertical farming involves growing food within towns and cities inside
environmentally controlled multistory buildings that recycle organic, human,
and animal waste, and wastewater. Indoor farming is not new, but existing
operations need to increase substantially both in terms of output and the
range of products produced. The concept offers urban renewal, sustainable
year-round production of food, and employment. But government-supported
economic incentives are needed so that the private sector, universities, and
local entrepreneurs can develop the concept. However, in the end, vertical
farm must be efficient, cheap to construct, safe to operate, and independent
of public subsidies and outside support.
Introduction 15
Rapid population growth at the global level has vastly increased
the amount of land used for food production. In fact, nearly 30% of the
earths total land surface is now used for agricultural purposes. This has
radically altered the natural landscape and functioning of ecosystems.
However, alternative approaches to food production that can prevent further
encroachment on ecosystems while also increasing urban resilience are
available. The experience of Shanghai, which is nearly self-sufcient in the
production of vegetables and grain, demonstrates that signicant amounts
of food can be grown on empty urban lots. Similarly, rooftop gardens in
Berlin and New York are often used for urban farming, the scale of which can
range from simple balcony boxes to vertical farms that grow food inside
environment-controlled, multistory buildings that recycle organic, human,
and animal waste and wastewater (Figure 3). Such initiatives provide an
alternative to trucking or ying produce in from distant locales where land-
intensive methods of food production are used.
Figure 3 A Vertical Farm
Gray water collection and
sand fltration system -
used to irrigate soil crops
and fush toilets
Methane and CO
2
tanks -
methane used for heating
biogas digester, apartment
cooking and heating
Biogas Digester-Methaneand
CO
2
by-products
Black water gravity
fltration system
through perimeter
hydroponics
Black water liquid and
solid separation tanks-
solid waste dried in kiln
for fertilizer
Liquid separate sent to
Hydroponic Filtration
Loop
Nutrients removed
by plants as source of
fertilizer
Black water gravity fed
fltration system through
perimeter hydroponics
By-product of fresh
water used in gray
water collection or
safely returned to water
source
2009 BLAKE KURASEK
Black water collection -
from building sewage
CO
2
= carbon dioxide.
Source: Despommier, Dickson. The Vertical Farm: Reducing the Impact of Agriculture on Ecosystem
Functions and Services. Columbia University, New York. Available: www.verticalfarm.com
Source: ADB. 2011b.
84 Green Cities
Cooling the Public Realm
As the climate heats up, a central challenge for city planners will be to create
compact, cool communities whose natural amenities offer alternatives to
urban sprawl. However, climate-resilient urban designdrawing from urban
climatology and sustainable designis not well understood, although
considerable technical knowledge exists within these elds. There are,
however, a number of barriers to implementing climate-resilient design on a
large scale, including lack of institutional capacity.
Wind affects temperature, rates of evaporative cooling, and plant
transpiration. It is therefore an important factor in implementing district-wide
passive cooling strategies at the microclimate level. Air ow across parks,
green roofs, and water bodies can accentuate the cooling effect of the wind,
while the alignment and design of streets can reinforce external cooling.
21
It is also important for passive cooling in buildings. For example, streets in
Masdar City and in the planned redevelopment of Thanh Hoa in Viet Nam
are used to encourage air circulation, fresh air distribution, and microclimate
protection (Raven 2010). Parks and open plazas are vital components of
such designs (Box 1.14).
Urban ventilation is being proposed in a comprehensive urban
development project for Than Hoa City in Viet Nam, through urban
passageways that enhance wind circulation and improve the microclimate
through passive cooling. Urban morphology is responsible for varying the
surface roughness and porosity of the city, impacting airows effectiveness
in passive cooling and reducing energy loads in the built environment
(Raven 2011).
21
Advection, in chemistry and engineering, is a transport mechanism of a substance by a
uid, due to the uids bulk motion in a particular direction. An example of advection is the
transport of pollutants or silt in a river.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 85
Smart Technologies: Infrastructure
and Digital Technology
Rapid technological developments are exerting profound impacts on urban
systems (OECD 1992). Information technology and communication have
revolutionized how we can manage the ow of people and goods, and how
these are transported. Smart technologies are already utilized for satellite-
based surveillance of public transport for the operations of certain logistics
and for management of home-based technologies. Intelligent infrastructure
that is digital and internet-based complements conventional physical
infrastructure as cities and homes become smarter and more sophisticated
(Keijer and Sandstrom 2007). Advocates of smart technologies have
recommended that more smart technology will help achieve sustainable
green cities. Thus, it is suggested to decrease energy and increase
technology (Albert Speer & Partner 2009). Smart technologies have been
Box 1.14 City Greening: Thanh Hoa, Viet Nam
Two green park bands
in Thanh Hoa City,
Viet Nam that stretch
throughout the city
are oriented toward
the sea breeze and
the cool night winds.
Green and blue
ngers Linear parks
and urban forests:
Contiguous green
corridors, canals and
open space networks;
conceiving storm water
retention as urban
design amenities; and
enhanced connectivity
and transportation.
Source: Raven. 2011.
86 Green Cities
utilized in Singapore and Stockholm
22
to administer road user charges
and to address trafc congestion in central city areas. In the Republic of
Korea, the U-City Initiative has set itself the target of developing smart or
ubiquitous cities: by 2015 some 60 cities will be converted into U-cities.
One of these is New Songdo in Incheon, where a complete networking
of all urban services through sensors is being piloted (Hatzelhoffer 2011).
A similar project of the i-City is under development in Malaysia.
Intelligent systems such as e-systems and e-governance systems
support adoption of information technology systems that integrate these
activities, increase efciencies and cost recovery in each sector, and enable
better management of service delivery. These systems provide the backbone
of a green city and enable synergies to be achieved across sectors (e.g.,
more efcient transport and higher-density buildings provide additional
energy-efciency benets (Espinoza 2011).
As cities grow more crowded and complex, they try to keep their
residents as constantly connected as possible through cables, wireless
networks, and even such traditional tools as call centers, in order to
compete with other global cities, but also to stay livable and, to some
extent, governable. The urban quest is increasingly that of making high-
speed connections available anywhere, at any time, and at a reasonable
price. Seoul leads in this regard (International Herald Tribune 2011e).
In 2011, the Japanese technology group Panasonic introduced the plan
to build Japans rst smart city from scratch by 2013. Located in a Tokyo
suburb, the smart town in Fujisawa City, 40 kilometers southwest of Tokyo, will
be a showcase of new technologies. Other high-technology companies are
also working on their own projects: Honda in Saitama, Hitachi in Yokohama,
and Toshiba in Kashiwa. Their aim is to reduce carbon emissions through an
intelligent network of electricity grids and new equipment (Tanikawa 2011).
E-Governance and Accountability: The Basis for
More Effective Coordination
E-governance is public sector use of information and communication
technologies, such as wide area networks, the internet, and mobile
computing, to improve information and service delivery, encourage citizen
participation, and make government more accountable, transparent, and
22
www.symbiocity.org for SymbioCity, Sustainability in SwedenGet More for Less, The
Swedish experience in urban development.
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 87
effective. It generally leads to an improved interface with business and
industry, and increased transparency in operations that can lead to reduced
levels of corruption.
In general terms, there are three forms of communication ows which can be
improved through e-governance:
government-to-government (G2G), involving the sharing of data and
conducting electronic exchanges between public agencies;
government-to-business (G2B), which offers considerable opportunities
for improving procurement practices and increasing competition; and
government-to-citizen (G2C), which facilitates citizen interaction with
government, particularly in making transactions less time-consuming
and easier to carry out, improving access to public information, and
increasing citizen participation.
Box 1.15 E-Governance Initiatives in Tirunelveli Corporation, Tamil
Nadu, India
e- Governance initiatives for transparent, accessible, and user-friendly citizen
services:
Street Electricity. Details of 40,000 streetlights were computerized, and
citizens can register complaints about their condition.
Compost Yard Online Weighing System. The weight of collected garbage
is posted electronically and uploaded, along with the details of the
collecting driver and vehicle.
E-Legal Seva. This intranet-based system tracks legal cases. It handles the
corporations estimated 1,000 cases and is programmed to produce daily
alerts of which ones will be heard, in which court, and through which
advocate.
E-Survey. A web-based, land-use, and reserved land and land schemes
reporting system, e-survey maintains records of land use.
E-Town Plan. This web-based system tracks and processes new
construction and renovation applications and posts the details on the
internet.
Citihelp. Using this web-based system designed to redress general
complaints, citizens can register complaints and download forms with
proper help on how to fill them up, the payment required, and to whom
they should be submitted.
E-Cash Collection Center. This is a single-window online tax and services
collection center.
Source: ADB. 2011b.
88 Green Cities
Some cities emphasize the environment, others, infrastructure
whether transportation or information technologyand still others favor
other aspects of urban quality of life. While success has been mixed,
the trend for cities, rather than nations, is to compete in attracting global
investment and skilled professionals (International Herald Tribune 2011c).
The plan is to remake our cities and, through them, our lives.
Smart Technologies Assisting Improved Road Safety
Source: www.mobileye.com
Trafc Management System being
developed by COOPERS, a European
research initiative
80
80
80
Trafc Control
Center (TOC)
Coopers Service
Center (CSC)
1
2
In vehicle Human
Machine Interface (HMI)
4
Communication
Gateway (CGW)
Floating Car
Data (FCD)
5
Read Side Unit (RSU)
Variable Message
Sign (VMS)
6
Automotive PC (APC) 3
Source: P. Gilka. 2011.
Road Radar and Speed Limits
Road Radar and Speed Limits
Adapted from: Sensys British Columbia Ministry of Transportation
Tracking and recording
Operating from the side of the road, radars track traffic for speed and distance.
Road users may ignore speed limits but they cannot escape radar technology.
Speed limits
Different countries all over the world have different speed limits. Heres a list of the maximum speed limits set on motorways.
Sensys road radar
Report line
Photo coverage
Flash
Camera
At the set report line, a picture is taken of the violating vehicle.
It is stored with time, date, speed and location
Radar lobe
The wide-range lobe oversees several lanes.
Speed tracking starts 150 metres away and
from there the vehicles movement is
analysed. Vehicles exceeding the speed limit
will triger the system at the set report line.
Road radar tracks
multiple vehicles
Images
taken from
road radar
Entire car Plate number Drivers face
50
US Belgium Australia Italy Canada Ireland France Germany
None
UAE Austria New Zealand
100
150 km/h
140
130
100 100
113
120
110
130
120
130
Source: Sensys, British Columbia Ministry of
Transportation, Rhinocarhire.com
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 89
Greeneld Development: Overcoming the Ills of
Todays Cities?
The Green Cities agenda is most viable as an option for middle- and higher-
income countries, as these are developing new towns that will become
the cities of the future. Both the PRC and India will have to undertake
massive investments in these areas. The growing concern for cleaner and
more competitive cities suggests that investing in green and sustainable
environmental development will give such cities a competitive edge over
conventional high-carbon cities. But also in middle- to lower-income
countries, moving upward in urban environmental quality will emerge as
aspiration that will foster the gradual transformation of high-carbon cities
toward low-carbon performance.
The goal for urban development is to create high-density, efcient space
use that can generate attractive mixed land use in urban environments.
Compact urban life will reduce the need for commuting and transport,
simultaneously reducing carbon emissions. Instead of building cities for
cars, there will be mutually interrelated pedestrian-friendly environments.
High energy efciency will be achieved through a high degree of alternative
energy forms or the broad application of low-energy or passive energy
systems. Urban infrastructure and basic services will become sustainable
green services, which will be determined by water availability, water
potability, wastewater treatment and waste removal, air pollution, and trafc
congestion. The type and quality of such infrastructure will be the benchmark
for ecological efciency and reduction of GHG emissions.
As space requirements for mobility (trafc and parking) are reduced,
there will be more options for generating open and green spaces for leisure,
sports, and cultural outdoor activities. Development of more compact
communities will accommodate affordable habitat in more conveniently
located sites. The use of more ecological green and low-carbon building
materials will contribute to healthier habitats and working environments,
and the application of smart technologies will contribute to higher energy
efciency and increased levels of comfort and efciency. Many urban
studies demonstrate that more dense and compact cities are better cities,
but very high density may not be the best option. Rather, it is suggested
that compact development and green transit-oriented development are the
preferred options, and may be the best model for the PRCs cities and new
towns (Lehmann 2009, 713). Preparation of cities for the impacts of climate
change and their increased resilience to adapt to new safety requirements
will also have spatial implications, affecting zoning and land use. This serves
as a reminder that the best cities of the future will be those that are ready
and willing to adapt to constant change.
90 Green Cities
Enabling Green Cities
The greening of cities will be a complex, fragmented, and multisector process.
Among the constraints and barriers will be fragmented governance, issues
of affordability, and consumer preferences, all of which can lead to lack of
investment and risk aversion. Vested business interests in conventional
technologies and irrational behavioral patterns will also affect the cost of
switching to new green technologies and green lifestyles. Advocates of
green city development on the government, nongovernment, and business
sides are increasingly joining hands as the rationale for green technologies,
energy savings, and a sustainable urban future become evident.
The strategic Plan Sydney 2030 (a green, global, and connected city)
is oriented to making Sydney a low-carbon city, as Australias contribution
to ght climate change and global warming (City of Sydney; Siegel 2011).
Similarly, Freiburg in Germany, which labels itself as a green city, has become
one of the biggest pioneers in passive energy solar-based architecture and
is home to the German solar panel industry. For coalitions and advocacy
to work, practical approaches with mass appeal are needed, which can
be funded through user contributions or private sector investment. On the
planning and regulatory side, it will require basic ground rules, such as urban
growth boundaries, land-use regulations, density regulations, encouragement
of density through rewards and bonuses, establishment of entities with
special planning and implementation powers, trafc and vehicular control,
parking standards, car-fee developments, and emission controls (UNEP 2011,
477). This can go together with public awareness and information campaigns
that monitor environmental performance, the carbon budget of a city, and its
environmental quality. But the most clearly and well understood measures are
incentives or nancing instruments.
Incentives and disincentives include (i) fuel taxes that internalize the
external costs of vehicle use and provide the nancial capacity to invest
in green development; (ii) reduction of perverse subsidies such as fuel
subsidies, which support long-distance commuting; (iii) tax incentives for
investments in energy-saving home technologies and retrotting of buildings;
(iv) road user charges in city centers and peak hours; (v) parking charges for
on- and off-street parking; and (vi) limitations on the number of car license
plates and auctioning of new ones.
Financing tools for green city developments include (i) value-capture-
after-public-transport investments to nance transport investments through
land-related taxes; (ii) cost recovery of green infrastructure services;
(iii) encouragement of private sector participation through innovative
publicprivate partnership projects; (iv) pooled purchases of technology
to bring down individual costs of investment; and (v) carbon credits under
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 91
the Clean Development Mechanism for green investments by cities or the
private sector.
Lifestyle Changes
Behavioral changes by all urban citizens will be vital (McDilda 2008), but
this does not suggest a need to reduce the quality of life. There is merely
a need to adjust to new environmental realities, such as how we use water
and energy, how we insulate homes and work spaces, how we travel, what
goods we buy, and how we process and recycle our wastes. Green is the
new way of living; sustainable solutions are the new goal (Von Weizscker
et al. 2009).
Many private sector corporations and industries that are ready to go
green have started to market green as a fashionable and necessary style of life
and consumption. Politicians are also joining this trend. European companies
have set their eyes on exporting green solutions to emerging markets, and
see this as a new export opportunity to the PRC, India, and South America.
In turn, even the PRC is banking on development of environment-friendly,
green, industrial products. Going green is not only a matter of following and
implementing new environmental legislation. Achieving a green lifestyle and
green economy will also create new forms of wealth. Urban planners and
designers will take this into account. Our future cities will need to become
carbon-free, with carbon-negative buildings. New technologies will help, and
new social patterns of green city life will complement these developments
(Battle 2009). With the speed of developments in turbulent times, however, it
appears as if we are crossing a watershed, not being aware of it.
The Political Scenario for the Carbon-Free City
The role of leadership by example and public policy is vital to introducing
the greening of cities to the building industry. Government-owned public
buildings (administrative complexes, schools, hospitals, cultural buildings,
public housing) or government-initiated projects are important opportunities
for introducing green construction practices, and for implementing
innovation and green public procurement procedures. Regulatory measures
and controls should be the most effective and cost-efcient interventions
in bringing about the transformation of cities. These need to be combined
with pricing instruments to achieve greater impact from the private sector
and local communities. Innovative private sector initiatives and green
building councils can initiate the gradual transition to lower carbon usage,
application of more energy-conscious technologies, and more resource-
92 Green Cities
efcient buildings. Some industrial corporations have committed to
promoting innovative technologies, working toward technologies that foster
sustainable urban development through green transport, green energy, and
green building technology.
23
It seems that much of what developing Asia has seen during the 20th
century is the proliferation of the industrial megacity. The 21st century will see
a rollback that tests the sustainable green city, for example, by rolling back
carbon emissions. Governments around the world are giving more inuence
to their lead cities, which, in partnership with the private sector, reinvent the
environment of the future. Cities are essential in the ght to save our planet
for future generations (Figure 1.8 and Gavron 2009, 385).
Given the urgency of transitioning to green development, and despite
the constraints that exist, we can say that it is too late to be pessimistic;
there is a need now to be positive and proactive.
24

23
Siemens, which promotes green cities and sustainable urban development globally, is one
such example of a corporation working on multiple technology innovations for cities of
tomorrow.
24
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqxENMKaeCU
Figure 1.8 Adoption of Green City Planning and Technologies
Source: Authors.
Adoption of Green Cities Planning and Technologies
Gross
Domestic
Product
Least-Developed
Countries
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Urban agriculture
Least-income
Countries
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Urban agriculture
Middle-income
Countries
(Eco-cities
development)
Compact Cities
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Green construction
Urban agriculture
technology
Smart technologies
High-income
Countries
(Eco-cities
development)
Compact Cities
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Green construction
technology
Urban agriculture
Smart technologies
Time
Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 93
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Spatial Development and Technologies for Green Cities 107
Annex
SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City technical performance standards
Natural environment
Air quality should meet at least the National Ambient Air Quality Grade II
Standard of the Peoples Republic of China (PRC)
Water bodies should meet Grade IV of the PRCs national standards
Carbon emission per unit of gross domestic product should not exceed 150
tons of Carbon (tons-C) per $1 million
Human-made environment
Buildings should meet green building standards
At least 12 square meters of public green space per person
Economy
At least 20% of energy to be derived from renewable sources
At least 50% of water supply to be derived from nontraditional sources
At least 50% of employable residents have jobs
Lifestyle
Daily water consumption per person should not exceed 120 liters
At least 60% of total waste recycled
At least 90% of trips within city should be green trips
At least 20% of the housing stock will be subsidized public housing
Qualitative Indicators
Safe and healthy ecology to be maintained through green consumption and
low-carbon operations
Development of recycling industries to be promoted, as well as orderly
development of surrounding regions
Source: Adapted from the SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City.
108
CHAPTER 2
Urban Metabolism and
the Zero-Waste City:
Transforming Cities through
Sustainable Design and
Behavior Change
by Steffen Lehmann
Introduction and Denitions
By the year 2025, the worlds population will reach 8 billion, and almost
60% of those people will live in metropolitan regions, i.e., in cities. Around
the globe, urbanization and the growth in metropolitan areas is already
affecting nature, biodiversity, food supply, the built environment, and society
in profound ways. However, the international community has made little
progress over the last 20 years in restraining global carbon dioxide (CO
2
)
emissions, while an increasing amount of emissions is coming from large
developing nations, such as the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) and India.
Because of human activity, the planet is reaching a potentially catastrophic
tipping point. Several scientic studies indicate the estimated biodiversity
loss between 1996 and 2011 to be around 12%.
An increasing proportion of research in climate change mitigation and
adaptation in certain disciplines focuses on the future of our cities and how
we will design, build, operate, maintain, and recycle products, as well as
on buildings and city districts in a low-carbon urban future. Our research at
the University of South Australia examines rapidly urbanizing and changing
cities in Asia and the Pacic, and involves not only architects but also cultural
studies researchers, contractors and developers, economists, engineers,
health professionals, planners, psychologists, and sociologists. Such
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 109
interdisciplinary research includes issues of sustainable design and behavior
change. It thus aims to rethink the way we deal with material ows; outlines
why rapid urbanization is a problem; and discusses possible solutions, new
models, and opportunities.
Many Asian cities have existed for a very long time, and one can learn
a great deal from their history, such as how such cities became resilient
when faced with extreme situations and challenges, and how they have
developed in the face of the ecosystems nite resources. Today, we stand
at a crossroads concerning the future of Asian cities. Most cities in Asia and
the Pacic have experienced rapid urbanization over the last 2 decades,
while growth of the cities in Europe and Northern America has slowed,
requiring a renewed focus on urban renewal. Shanghai, for example, has
transformed rapidly during this relatively short period, as have Bangkok,
Hong Kong, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, and Singapore. But are these changes
in the right direction and sufcient to achieve the necessary reductions of
CO
2
emissions? Are they part of the transition we need to make toward a
low-carbon world? I suggest not.
In 2010, our research in the Centre for Sustainable Design and Behaviour
examined the concept of green urbanism, which is a principle-based, step-
by-step approach for urban transformation and retrotting of existing cities
toward sustainability (Lehmann 2010a). This concept has now been developed
further into the zero-waste city model, which is outlined in this chapter.
Urbanism is the academic discipline concerned with understanding the spatial
organization and dynamics of urban areas, and with comparing, analyzing,
evaluating, and inventing new ways to maintain the balance between public
and private, the built and the unbuilt, and local and global perspectives. Green
urbanism is the holistic concept of urban systems that exist and change (grow
or shrink) without negatively impacting the ecosystem. It is a particular form
of urbanism that is concerned with a healthy balance between the city and
its surrounding hinterland. It underpins practical action in order to shape the
urban environment in a sustainable way. The zero-waste city model takes the
concept further, and optimizes all urban material ows in a way that leads to
100% resource recovery, and does away with landll. Zero waste has become
a worldwide movement. It considers the entire life cycle of products and
buildings, and expresses the need for industrial and societal systems and
construction processes that are based on this life cycle. It means that 100%
of waste is diverted from landlls, and that all products, buildings, and cities
have been designed in a way that allows all resources to be recovered without
negatively impacting the ecosystem. Today, raw materials are extracted and
processed at an accelerated rate, and substances not directly useful to a
factory become unwanted waste, thus polluting the air, rivers, landscape,
and soil. The alternative cradle-to-cradle system seeks to build integrated,
closed-loop systems in which the by-products of one factory become the
feedstock of another, so that there is no waste. Just as in the natural world, in
110 Green Cities
which one organisms waste is another organisms opportunity, the goal of
such systems is zero waste.
Cities are complex systems under stress. Clearly, the current
development paradigm in most of the worlds cities, which is based on
ever-increasing consumption of resources, is unsustainable, and humanity
has to nd a new paradigm of urban development. In this chapter, we will
explore some linkages between material consumption, urban development,
and possibilities for resource recovery. The chapter will also suggest zero
wasterelated principles that can apply to both industrializing Asian cities
and existing cities in developed countries such as Australia or the United
States. Waste has been described as a misallocated resource (Lehmann
2010b); however, there cannot be a unied denition of waste, as each
city has different circumstances and waste streams, and needs to identify its
particular (localized) waste management solutions. Since climate change is
closely related to waste production in cities, the strategies suggested in this
chapter address both issues.
Rethink, Reduce, Reuse, Repair, Recycle:
the Concept of Zero-Waste Cities
Why is the concept of zero-waste cities important? When we look at the
ecological footprint of a city, we need to consider peoples behavior, lifestyles
and values, policies and legal frameworks, and the future of waste reduction
and resource recovery in households and urban settings. The Principles of
Green Urbanism (Lehmann 2010a) dened the triple-zero frameworks for
sustainable urban development as
zero fossil-fuel energy use,
zero waste, and
zero emissions.
Zero waste is an essential part of a holistic design framework that
increases a citys capacity to absorb change (e.g., the impacts of climate
change). Sustainable urban development that moves toward zero waste
includes three high-level, information-rich principles:
increasing resilience;
strengthening the interconnectivity of all systems and networks; and
identifying particular localized solutions that are shaped by relevant site-
specic parameters such as climate, context, or site.
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 111
Wasteful consumption is dened as the purchase of goods or services
that are not used at all, or are not used to their full potential, which results
in increased waste. Across the industrialized world, food and energy are the
most common examples of wasteful consumption. For example, in Australia
and the United States, more than 40% of food purchased is not eaten;
instead, it is thrown out (Sharp et al. 2011). More than one-third of all energy
used in Australia could be saved if more efcient energy use patterns were
in place. The concept of zero waste includes recycling rates above 80%,
combined with legislation against all landlls and waste incineration, which
produces toxic ash and air pollution, and burns material resources instead
of recovering them. The concept of zero waste likewise includes advanced
waste treatment processes that allow all resources incorporated into waste
to be fully recovered, thus looping and completely closing material cycles
(Grosse 2010, Lehmann 2010b).
Implementing material efciency in the construction sector requires a
change in how materials are approached throughout the supply chain. The
appropriate selection and use of materials for construction has a signicant
ecological and nancial impact on the construction industry. For example,
Santamouris (2001) estimates that each year, more than 3 billion tons of
raw materials are used worldwide to produce construction materials, which
represents almost 40% of the total ow of resources into the global economy,
while the building sector is responsible for 50% of material resources
taken from nature. Research by Harland (1993) and Tucker and Treloar
(1994) has shown that a high proportion of this material is wasted during
the construction phase. In fact, Harland has calculated the total proportion
of material wasted as a result of damage or offcutting at the installation
stage, spoilage during transport or storage, and inaccuracies in ordering
and specifying at about 20%. Similarly, Tucker and Treloar have calculated
the embodied energy of construction materials in Australia at 19.5% of total
energy use, meaning that a signicant amount of the energy that went into
producing these construction materials is wasted when these materials are
dumped into landlls. Using fewer materials by increasing material efciency
and using deconstructable (reversible) joint systems for easy reuse of entire
construction components are promising strategies for achieving signicant
materialand hence emissionssavings in the construction industry.
To reuse existing buildings would mean to build much less new buildings.
Even if the energy-efcient homes are environment-friendly passive houses,
it takes a lot of embodied energy to construct them new. Embodied energy
includes all energy required for the production of the materials, transport
and construction, which are all sources of CO
2
emissions. The balance is
even worse if one rst needs to demolish a building in order to erect a new
one. As a consequence, rather than constantly building new buildings, it
is much more sustainable to adaptively reuse existing structures, because
112 Green Cities
making better use of existing structures means one does not consume so
much energy and generate huge amounts of waste. Building waste has
emerged as an immense problem. For instance, in Germany, construction-
related waste represents 23% of the total waste; and 57% of all waste from
construction and demolition cannot be recycled, ending up as landll. The
situation is similar in other developed countries. Therefore, it is timely to
focus more on the existing building stock and on upgrading districts rather
than on demolition.
Transferring the waste hierarchy (rethink, avoid/reduce, reuse, recycle)
into architecture is a radical approach to avoid material and energy waste.
Adaptive reuse and retrotting work done on an existing building requires
the architect to consider much more carefully what has already been built
and how to best take advantage of the existing structure. Usually, the less
change needed when adaptively reusing a building, the lower the amount of
energy required, the better the entire process.
Why the Concept of the Zero-Waste City Is Important
While there have been major changes in the way society manages waste
streams over the past 2 decades and recycling rates have increased, we are
still generating more waste per person each year (Australias National Waste
Report/EPHC 2010). Zero waste is therefore a timely and necessary goal.
Materials and resources are being depleted at an accelerating rate, and
rising consumption trends across the globe have placed material efciency,
waste avoidance, and recycling at the center of many governments policy
agendas. Resource recovery and the optimization of material ows can only
be achieved only through behavior change that reduces both the creation of
material waste and wasteful consumption.
Humanity has borrowed from the planet for a long time by exceeding
the planets carrying capacity. Thus, if our societies and the global economy
are not transformed, we risk further depletion of virgin materials and even
descent into unhealthy urban conditions (Meadows et al. 1971; Callenbach
1975; Von Weizaecker, Lovins, and Lovins 1997).
Each year until 2030, at least 150 million people will be entering the
middle class. This will bring almost 60% of the worlds population into a
middle-income bracket. However, over the same period energy demand is
projected to increase by 40%, and water demand is expected to outstrip
supply by 40% (WEF 2010).
All this illustrates that our current model of economic and urban
growth is driving an unhealthy system, and, as a consequence, we have
now passed the limits of our planets capacity to support us (Wackernagel
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 113
and Rees 1996, Brown 2009, Lovelock 2009). If we continue on our current
trajectory of population growth, material inefciency, and increasing resource
consumption, there will be an even greater disparity in resource availability
between the rich and the poor. For example, over the past 20 years, the
amount of waste Australians produce has more than doubled, and it is likely
that this amount will double again between 2011 and 2020, since the amount
of waste generated in Australia grows by 6%7% per year. Only about 52%
of all waste generated in Australia is currently recycled, which means that
48% of it becomes landll (EPHC and DEWHA 2010). The situation in cities
in the PRC is now becoming similar to that of the developed countries, as the
industrialized worlds high-consumption development model is now driving
gross domestic product growth in the PRC (McKinsey & Company 2009).
In State of the World 2010: Transforming Cultures from Consumerism to
Sustainability, the Worldwatch Institute (2010) lists many of the environmental
and social problems we face today as being symptoms of a deeper systemic
failing, which is a dominant cultural paradigm that encourages living in ways
that often run directly counter to the realities of our planets nite resource
base. Consumerism has spread around the world, and hyper-consumerism
(an extreme form of overconsumption) has led to ever more unsustainable
consumption levels. The report states that if this pattern spreads further to
rapidly developing and urbanizing societies in the PRC, India, and Viet Nam,
there will be little possibility of successfully addressing climate change, or
any of the other environmental problems that are poised to disrupt human
civilization. The Worldwatch Institutes program director, Eric Assadourian,
notes: It will take a sustained, long-term effort to redirect the traditions,
social movements, and institutions that shape consumer cultures towards
becoming cultures of sustainability (Worldwatch Institute 2010, 36).
We are recycling more waste per person, but we are also producing
more waste. Increasing consumption is not always visible because the
increase in recycling and the reduction of waste sent to landll can hide
our increased levels of consumption and waste generation (Zero Waste SA
2010). Recycling is an important part of waste management, but it is far
better to avoid waste creation, reduce resource and material usage, and
reuse components and materials in remanufacturing. Far too much toxic
e-waste (i.e., waste from discarded electronic devices such as mobile
phones, computer monitors, and the like) still ends up in our soil and rivers,
potentially polluting our drinking water, soil, and air; and organic waste ends
up in landlls, emitting methane (National Waste Report/EPHC 2010).
In 1974, Californian environmentalist Paul Palmer coined the notion
of zero waste. Two decades later, the German philosopher and urban
planner Karl Ganser came up with the concept of change and prosperity
without growth, something still unimaginable today for most politicians and
114 Green Cities
economists (Hannemann 2000). Instead, hyper-consumption continues.
Passing sustainable limits has consequences, as we see in increasing global
warming and changing weather patterns, declining availability of natural
resources, loss of biodiversity, and an increase of desertication. Things
have to change.
We must make every effort to future-proof the built environment by
designing and building more resilience into urban systems. By doing so, we
will learn from natures complex ecosystems and natural ordering principles
(i.e., nature knows no waste) and will redene our industrial ecology to
change the way we produce, manufacture, package, transport, and reuse
products and materials. We are involved in a green revolution, which has
already started to transform our society, economy, energy and transport
systems, waste management systems, and our design of products and
buildings in a way that makes them more modular, thus facilitating their easy
disassembly at their end of life so that they can be reused. New strategies
for reorganizing the urban landscape are emerging, and the logical next step
is to go further and rethink industrial systems, production processes, and
construction methods.
Waste recycling alone is insufcient. Programs for sustainable
consumption, waste avoidance, and resource recovery are needed to
allow humans to enjoy material well-being as well as environmental quality
(UN-HABITAT 2008, Grosse 2010). Changes at the cultural and behavioral
levelbeyond the usual emphasis on technology and efciencyshould
help develop less materialistic values that support peoples lifestyles without
reducing our living standards.
Transformative Change at Systemic Levels toward
Sustainable Consumption: From Consumers to Citizens
Over the past 2 decades, a transformation has taken place, as hundreds of
millions of people moved from a rural existence to an urban and increasingly
globalized one, thus contributing to a rapid rise in consumption. This
transformation, combined with growth in the global population forecast
to reach 9 billion by 2050, has led to increasing scarcity of some natural
resources and escalating global warming. Today, humanitys ecological
footprint is in ecological overshoot: not only is it 50% greater than the earths
capacity to support it, it is forecast to rise by an additional one-third by 2030.
How can sustainable consumption be achieved? A rethinking of the
idea of seemingly endless growth began in 1972 with the Club of Romes
report The Limits to Growth, which argued that urban development and
lifestyles should move toward the creation of value and well-being. Now,
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 115
transformative change at the systemic level is needed to shift the global
population from being passive consumers to active citizens, fully aware of
their choices and abilities in contributing to a less consumptive future. The
theoretical concept of decoupling consumption and gross domestic product
growth (which see throughputs as the sole measure of economic progress)
from the use of natural resources and its broader environmental impacts has
been understood for some time. However, implementations of such a notion
have proved difcult and slow (Figure 2.1a).
Source: Lehmann (2010a).
The city of tomorrow must be transformed from an unsustainable linear
throughput of materials to a closed-loop circular metabolism, in which
materials, energy, water, food, and other resources are fully recovered and
continuously circulated for material gains and greenhouse gas reduction.
The Centre for Sustainable Design and Behaviour is researching the
transformation of existing cities at the neighborhood level by envisaging and
designing new models of low-carbon cities (Lehmann 2010a).
The waste hierarchy, which assigns the highest priority to waste avoidance
and (adaptive) reuse, can be applied to both architecture and urban planning.
Figure 2.1a Urban Metabolism
116 Green Cities
Applying the principles of design to recycling and disassembly allows existing
buildings to be upgraded, reused, and retrotted. The most sustainable
building is the one that already exists (Lehmann 2010a).
The sustainable city requires holistic systemic solutions as well as
targeted action at the local level (Lehmann 2010a).
The question is: Will we be able to decouple rising levels of afuence and
consumption from waste of materials and products fast enough? It is well
documented that higher levels of extraction, processing, and use of materials
have led to increasing levels of environmental degradation. Yet, the pace of
environmental change has been too slow to keep up with the increases in
consumption levels, and thus to curb the escalating use of natural resources
and rising tide of environmental degradation that we are now facing. Some
businesses and industries have already moved to more resource-efcient
production processes that incorporate whole-life cycle approaches (including
extended producer responsibility), improved transparency, and adopted more
sustainable supply chain management (and sourcing decisions). However,
this transformation is proceeding at too slow a pace to counterbalance the
rate at which consumption is expanding in the developing world.
This is why it is time to accelerate, scale up, and most effectively
implement sustainable consumption that empowers consumers to act
Figure 2.1b Waste Hierarchy
Source: Lehmann (2010a).
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 117
as citizens and help change public policy. To achieve this, we need to
change our approach to start catalyzing the transformation needed. Values
and behaviors are relatively difcult to change, as they are often instilled
in childhood and acquired in the early years of education. Implementing
sustainable consumption will require a shift in focus in the following areas:
shifting from dening and analyzing the case for sustainable
consumption to identifying and accelerating the policies needed to
drive the change that is required;
moving beyond the discussion of why sustainability is important, toward
identifying leverage points that will allow us to tip the global economy as
a whole toward sustainable consumption;
integrating the concept of sustainability into innovative business models
and product design, creating new markets based on different models of
value, identifying new ways to engage with consumers (e.g., incentivizing
environmentally preferable behavior);
inuencing values and attitudes in a way that encourages reconsidering
what consumption means, thus beginning a transition phase of reduced,
decoupled consumption (e.g., using products for longer periods and
producing more durable products);
implementing public policy that includes sustainability incentives that
help transform the context in which consumer decision making takes
place;
Figure 2.1c Holistic System Thinking
Source: Lehmann (2010a).
118 Green Cities
encouraging industry and business to transform their practices and to
improve investor accountability by reporting outcomes in terms broader
than shareholder nancial return; and
encouraging a new generation of products and buildings that are
designed with resource recovery in minddesigning for modularity and
disassembly, reuse, and zero waste; closing recycling loops; and using
fewer materials to deliver the same quantity of products or services
(Lehmann 2011b).
In Designing for Zero Waste: Consumption, Technologies and the
Built Environment (Lehmann and Crocker 2012), I discussed the need to
fundamentally change the way we consume, by designing for human
experience rather than acquisition. This is about reconceptualizing the
consumer as a citizen. Usually, after our fundamental needs have been
met, the acquisition of more stuff is unlikely to make us more satised or
happy, since ownership often brings with it more concern than happiness.
Consumption has been described as a fundamental human cultural
expression with a short time horizon that serves many goals or aspirations,
including status, wealth, celebration, or success. Yet, if the trend of growing
consumption continues without a fundamental change in the way we
consume, we will face a very challenging future (McKenzie-Mohr and Smith
1999, Cooper 2010, UN-HABITAT 2010).
Therefore, the greatest potential for environmental sustainability lies
in our ability to transcend existing paradigms and to inuence the values
and consumption patterns of citizens, thus motivating a change in behavior
(Lehmann 2011a). Today, consumers have emerged as the key shapers of
the global economy through their product choices, consumption patterns,
and engagement as members of communities. Setting social norms for
sustainability and recognizing the inuence of context on decision making
could offer a new way of unlocking citizen engagement that leads to reduced
consumption.
This might be accomplished through the use of environmental standards,
or public awareness campaigns that support environment-friendly behavior.
Such campaigns have now become increasingly commonplace and can be
highly successful. For example, the total amount of waste recycled in the
United States increased by 24.4% from 1995 to 2000 following the launch of
a public awareness campaign proposed by the nongovernment organization
Environmental Defense (AD Council 2001).
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 119
Cities as the Solution: Urban Form, Sustainable
Consumption, Inefcient Suburbs, and Localized
Responses for Waste Management
Cities with the largest ecological footprints have a sprawling urban form,
their maintenance requiring vast tracts of land, a relatively high degree of
automobile dependency, and massive energy consumption. Living in distant
suburbs far from workplaces is costly for residents, takes a health toll in daily
trafc congestion, is inefcient for infrastructure provision, and consumes
signicant amounts of space and precious farmland. A successful city has a
high-quality public space network that makes walking pleasant, something
totally missing in suburbs. Investigations by my research center suggest
that as density decreases, per capita demand of resources such as land and
energy, and costs for infrastructure increase. Furthermore, suburbs often
end up becoming social wastelands, in which people are disconnected from
neighbors and television becomes a substitute for personal interaction.
Politicians should prioritize nding solutions to urban sprawl, an important
part of any program aimed at this goal being to revitalize city centers, and to
transform already-built suburbs into more dense and mixed-use subcenters.
Compact, mixed-use, transit-served inll development has been proven
to be both sustainable and more likely to result in social contacts. In fact,
Australian cities are now witnessing more and more people moving from the
suburbs to city centers (Mees 2010). We know that the sprawling model of
American urbanization that features automobile dependency, inefciency,
and consumption of agricultural land is not sustainable. More population-
dense Asian cities such as Hong Kong, Seoul, and Singapore can teach
us much about successful integration of public transport. High-rise living
in tall towers might not be the solution for Australian cities, but our aging
population and increase in the proportion of single-person households
requires us to develop better models for inner-city living, preferably in
compact three- to eight-story inll buildings. Urban planners, developers,
and municipalities need to end unsustainable land use, and replace the
20th century greenelds-turned-into-suburbs development model with
something more sustainable.
The urbanized environment is increasingly where waste reduction
solutions must and will be found. Every city will have to nd its ideal set
of solutions, or localized responses, to resolve questions of material ows
and the management of waste streams (Lehmann 2010b). Local responses
to globalizing forces will depend partly on the inter-linkages in governance
from international structures, through multilateral organizations to nation-
states, regions, and localities, as mediated through social-local identity (i.e.,
120 Green Cities
identity derived from the connection between where we are and what we
believe (Cherni 2001). It is possible, as Stasinopoulos and his colleagues
(2008) point out, to apply a whole-system design approach alongside a
more integrated approach to engineering. They argue that whole system
design is increasingly being seen as one of the most cost-effective ways
to both increase the productivity and reduce the negative environmental
impacts of an engineered system (Stasinopoulos et al. 2008, 32). The focus
on design is critical: the output of the design stage of a project locks in most
of the economic and environmental performance parameters of the designed
system throughout its life cycle, which can span from a few years to many
decades. It is now widely acknowledged that all designersparticularly
engineers, architects, and industrial designersneed to understand and
implement a whole-system design approach, because as Stasinopoulos
and his colleagues (2008) explain: advances in energy, materials, and water
productivity can be achieved through applying an integrated approach to
sustainable engineering, to enhance the established systems engineering
framework, from passenger vehicles and computer systems, to the
temperature control of buildings and domestic water systems.
William Rees (1996) noted that the ecological footprint of high-income,
high-consuming cities is approximately 200 times their physical land area.
This means that the amount of land required to produce all the resources
consumed in these unsustainable cities is 200300 times greater than the
physical space the city actually occupies. If one excludes food and energy
from this estimate, the amount of goods consumed and the resources
required to produce them along with the materials used to physically
construct the city would require an ecosystem area (assuming global
average bio-productivity) of more than 40 times the citys physical size. Of
this amount, approximately half is attributed to the consumption of goods
and half is attributed to the materials used to construct the city (Young and
Sachs 1994).
Household Behavior and the Impact of
Everyday Lifestyles
The other important aspect of creating zero-waste cities is individual
consumption, which is driven by afuence, as residents of wealthier
cities consume far more and have larger per-capita ecological footprints
(Wackernagel and Rees 1996). We must avoid generalizing with regard to
inner-city living. Individual consumption levels must be factored into overall
ecological footprint calculations. For example, Sydneys land-efcient city
center has residential high-rise buildings with a larger ecological footprint
overall than its inner-ring suburbs that are connected to public transport.
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 121
This is because of the high-consumption lifestyle of the wealthy population
that inhabits the citys towers and the additional energy needed for lighting
large common areas and lobbies and the running of elevators (Perkins et al.
2009, Major Cities Unit 2011). Inner-city high-rise apartments may cater to
high-consumption lifestyles, but at the same time, Perkins and his colleagues
(2009) note, urban consolidation through more compact inner-city mid-rise
housing developments provides opportunities for signicant reductions in
energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.
An important issue in the discussion of zero waste is therefore the
analysis of consumerism, consumption patterns, and lifestyle and behavior
change, particularly at the household and building scale. This requires more
research to explore the complexity of how urban form inuences and drives
consumption and lifestyle, peoples motivations and attitudes, values and
behavior, and the dynamics of social change.
Household daily behavior is increasingly seen by researchers as the
starting point for change. There is a complex interplay between policy
initiatives and individual behavior which points to the difculty of mobilizing
shifts in beliefs, lifestyle values, and consumption patterns. Our behavior
in our homes (e.g., our recycling habits, consumer choices, and transport
preferences) has a signicant impact on the environment, both locally and
globally. This is clearly visible in household behavior as regards waste and
recycling, food consumption and food waste, and transportation patterns
and mobility choices. Among the researchers who have explored these
links is Patrik Sderholm (2010), who argues that we need to gain a better
understanding of how environmental policy enters the private, domestic
sphere, and how it inuences household behavior, to generate behavior
change at the household level and the move towards sustainable societies.
Our experience at the University of South Australia is that the most
successful research projects relating to sustainability are those in which the
community is involved, and those that enable stakeholders to identify with
the outcomes of their activities. Changing behavior is not easy; it usually
begins with greater awareness (e.g., enabling consumers to visualize carbon
emissions and energy use through the use of smart meters). Education for
raising awareness is essential, but equally important is the necessity of
explaining the rules and benets of waste separation. This suggests that
the problem is not solely technology but also the acceptance of behavior
change. It appears that changing behavior is easier in smaller towns and
more difcult in larger cities (Taylor and Philip 2012).
Sustainability theorist Tim Jackson (2006) notes that [c]onsumption
drives our economies and denes our lives; making it sustainable is an
enormous and essential challenge and that the problem of changing
122 Green Cities
consumer behavior and making our lives more sustainable continues to
challenge opinion-formers and policy makers alike. The question of how
best to build cities, buildings, and products, and the issues of lifestyle and
behavior are what will likely make the difference between the irreparable
destruction of our ecosystem and the healthy evolution of our civilization.
Zero-Waste Concepts for the Future: State-of-the-
Art Approaches and Future Possibilities
The concept of the zero-waste city is based on zero use of landlls and
a circular closed-loop ecosystem in which waste is constantly recycled,
recovered, and turned into resources. Similarly, urban planning in the context
of the zero-waste city includes reducing, recycling, reusing, remanufacturing,
and composting waste and materials. This signicantly reduces the overall
volume of waste, since waste is diverted from landlls and is not incinerated.
Likewise, all goods and building components produced are fully recyclable,
and waste is constantly turned into new products. Finally, extended
producer responsibility and product stewardship principles are in place
for all products, and waste is seen as a resource that must be recovered
(Lehmann and Crocker 2012, Figure 2.2).
Figure 2.2 The Six Categories of the Zero-Waste City Model
Source: Lehmann and Crocker (2012).
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 123
The holistic zero-waste city model, has six interconnected categories
(indicators) that need to be addressed simultaneously to recover 100% of
resources used. Waste is a misallocated resource that is precious (Zaman
and Lehmann 2011).
Recycling metals, glass, and cardboard became common practice in
the 1980s. The most serious waste management challenges today are the
immense quantity of materials and the ever-increasing complexity of the
waste mix (e.g., plastics and e-waste). Energy, water, and material use are
all closely interconnected. The limited emphasis of industrial economies on
productivity necessarily results in large volumes of waste, as whole-of-life
approaches are not incorporated into its narrow denition. Products and
services with a lighter ecological footprint must replace less efcient ones.
New advanced waste treatment technologies such as anaerobic digestion
of organic waste, biofuel production from sludge, and new composting
methods are constantly being developed, as are more efcient production
methods.
The toxic substances contained in dumped e-waste are poisoning
humans, animals, soil, air, water, and food. However, while the unbridled
consumption of information technologies destroys the ecosystem, we are
made to believe that rapid technological turnover is necessary and is an
indicator of progress. Maxwell and Miller (2012) note that e-waste has
mostly been produced in wealthy nations (Australasia, Western Europe,
Japan, and the United States) and dumped in emerging economies in Africa,
Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America, and in the PRC, though this is
changing as India and the PRC generate their own deadly media detritus.
Future ecological models of business and urban development will be
about systems integration and innovation at all levels:
Existing communities will be retrotted at the same time as we develop
new ones. Architecture and design will be less about new buildings and
more about retrotting, urban renewal, and adaptive reuse of existing
buildings and neighborhoods as vehicles for increasing resource
efciency. We already see examples of old shopping malls being
converted into high-density, mixed-use developments.
Food production will be returned to the city through urban farming.
Building efciency will be improved, and public transport will be given
priority over private vehicles. Increased investment in food security and
public transport will become common practice.
Private cars will increasingly be seen as a waste of urban space, and
public spaces will be upgraded to make walking and cycling more
pleasant and safer. In most Asian cities, public space needs signicant
124 Green Cities
upgrading such as improving waterfronts and the amount of space
between buildings, and creating better opportunities for intergenerational
social interaction.
Sustainable designs will be developed inspired by nature, where waste
is seen as a resource and organic waste is used as a fertilizer. Recycled
waste will create new building materials, and renewable energys potential
will be fully unleashed, harnessing wind, geothermal, solar, and biomass
resource technologies to feed into a smart grid that allows feeding-in of
energy from decentralized renewable sources. We will change the way
we generate energy and see more and more decentralized systems on
roofs and facades. Cities will become power stations, and citizens will
become energy producers as well as consumers.
Cities need to be reengineered to become more sustainable and resilient.
The public space network of a city is also very important. It can be observed
worldwide that vibrant and successful cities have a high-quality public realm
as their centerpiece, with well-developed pedestrian connectivity, beautiful
green spaces, and well-designed public waterfronts.
Residential building construction is also about to change, as mid-rise (4-
to 8-story) insertions within the existing urban fabric are gaining in popularity.
This will help reduce unsustainable suburban housing built on greeneld
sites and precious farmland. The inner-city residential inll buildings of
the future will focus on weight reduction by using lightweight construction
systems and cladding, these buildings being constructed with low-carbon
construction systems that use high-performance timber panels (cross-
laminated timber). Building more mid-rise inll housing using prefabricated
modules with timber is essential, as carbon sequestered in trees becomes
stored in wood products for the duration of the products useful life. This
stores carbon and has the potential to turn buildings into carbon sinks,
while increasing resource efciency and reducing the waste of materials
associated with current construction methods (Figure 2.3).
Modular prefabrication using low-carbon construction systems such
as cross-laminated timber panels will enable zero-waste construction, thus
making a high degree of material efciency and control of reduced embodied
energy possible.
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 125
Overcoming Barriers to an Energy- and Material-Efcient
Low-Carbon Future
Growth in human consumption is the transcending problem of our times.
Peter Newton (2011) points out that in the short span of 50 years, high-
income societies have shifted from an era when a simple life was the norm,
to one in which material consumption is pervasive and consumption is the
engine that drives postindustrial societies. The livability of cities in these
societies is directly attributable to the consumption of resources, indirectly
via their built environments and directly by their residents. He concludes that
this pattern of development is not sustainable nor equitable.
However, designing with an eye to resource and energy efciency is
not straightforward. In The Myth of Resource Efciency, Polimeni and his
colleagues (2009) describe what is known as the Jevons Paradox, which
was rst identied in 1865 by Australian engineer William Stanley Jevons in
relation to the use of coal. The paradox Jevons observed is that an increase
in the efciency of using a resource frequently leads to increased use of
that resource rather than to a reduction in its use. This phenomenon is also
referred to as the rebound effect, which causes previous gains in efciency
to be overwhelmed by increased use of the resource in question. The paradox
has been proved to apply not just to fossil fuels, but also to other resources.
Many scientists and policy makers argue that future technological innovations
will reduce consumption of resources. However, the Jevons Paradox explains
why we have to examine such an assumption carefully.
Figures 2.3 Prefabricated Engineered Timber Buildings Store Carbon
Multistory inner-city housing project on Wagramerstrasse, Vienna (2012): 100 apartments have been
built in 3- to 8-story timber buildings, storing approximately 2,400 tons of carbon dioxide in the
construction system and creating signicantly less waste. The system uses prefabrication and on-site
assembly.
P
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o
s
:

L
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h
m
a
n
n
,

2
0
1
2
.
126 Green Cities
Because of the Jevons Paradox, researchers are increasingly focusing on
behavior change and reuse of materials as a means of reducing the resource
intensity of production processes and consumption patterns. However, such
a shift in focus raises the questions as to how you engage those who cannot
or do not want to imagine a different future.
Behavior change has frequently been listed as the main hurdle to a more
energy- and material-efcient, low-carbon future. We therefore need to plan
better cities and design better buildings and products that need less energy,
water, materials, and other resources, thus generating less waste while
at the same time facilitating positive behavior change through innovative
design. We also need to enable people to identify the consequences of their
activities. For example, we can help people living in city centers to be less
dependent on air-conditioning and automobiles by offering attractive new
types of housing that are based on passive design principles.
Materials and goods are often discarded long before their usefulness is
exhausted. There is thus enormous potential for waste reduction by reusing
and remanufacturing materials, construction materials in particular (Lyle
1994, Girardet 1999). However, designing for reuse at the household level
remains under-researched. Products, packaging, and even entire buildings
can be reused and recycled through adaptive reuse, this goal being
embodied in the slogan Every reused item is another item not purchased
(a slogan which was popular in Singapore in the 1970s). A good example of
the practical implementation of adaptive reuse principles is the legislation
recently proposed by the Government of Australia that encourages reduced
packaging and introduces extended producer responsibilities (GPSC n.d.).
Fisher and Shipton (2009) have explained that the reuse of packaging
has a signicant effect on the quantity of material that enters the waste
stream, and the energy, and consequently carbon, that is expended in its
production. Most of the factors inuencing the potential for reuse relate
to design specics, including the type of materials used, the exibility
and adaptability of a buildings plan and section, or the symbolism of the
products branding. Other factors are more social, such as the effects on
reuse of the perceptions of different groups of consumers. Research in
consumption patterns and behavior change is still in its infancy, but is growing
in importance. Fisher and Shipton (2009) point out that understanding
consumers behavior is signicant for moving towards sustainability through
design. Recent research suggests that we have to increase our resource
efciency by a factor of ve. This means using ve times less material and
fewer resources to produce the same quality of life (Head 2008). In addition,
since being resource-efcient in this way requires innovation, it will probably
create new areas of employment.
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 127
Both short-term and long-term strategies capable of implementation in
both the developed and developing world are required to bring about the
desired change toward zero waste. If we can bring about a cultural shift that
makes living sustainably as natural as todays consumer lifestyle feels, we
will not only address urgent environmental crises but also create solutions to
problems not usually seen as environmental issues, such as income inequity,
housing affordability, obesity, and social isolation.
Globally, consumption continues to increase. How people consume
resources matters more than the sheer number of people on the planet,
or the population of a particular city. While wealthy nations have for quite
some time consumed more resources than emerging economies, the
resource consumption levels of emerging economies are increasing rapidly.
It is becoming clear that the consumption of resources now enjoyed in the
wealthiest nations will be impossible to sustain for all nations. Developing
countries still have the advantage of low consumption and a smaller
ecological footprint per person. It is important to understand that cities in
todays developing countries simply cannot develop in the same way that
car-dependent Australian or US cities developed in the past. Instead, they
need a model of urban development that transforms the emissions-intensive
industries, wasteful supply chains, and outdated construction methods of
todays developed countries into production and consumption patterns that
lead to long-term environmental sustainability.
To implement such a holistic model, we will have to abandon the
aspiration to consume ever more and begin the transition to a low-
carbon world. This means both making better, more efcient technologies
available, and also mobilizing changes in behavior and attitudes. Indeed,
approximately 25% of the reduction in emissions will have to come from
behavioral change. A recent study in the United Kingdom (Seyfang 2009)
indicates that unsustainable habits, behavior, and consumption patterns are
responsible for up to 40% of CO
2
emissions.
Research That Meets Global Challenges
Universities are leading the search for low-consumption, low-carbon, and
zero-waste solutions. Advances in knowledge, together with an awareness
of the complexity of todays world, have led scholars to pursue multifaceted
problems that cannot be resolved from the vantage point of a single
academic discipline. Therefore, universities are increasingly engaged with
industry, governments, community groups, and other institutions to support
multidisciplinary and integrated approaches to research in urban systems
thinking. Now is the time to scale up the scholarship in low-carbon urban
solutions and sustainable consumption patterns to match the magnitude of
128 Green Cities
the challenges we are facing, and to support the development of appropriate
policies. Collaboration across sectors is critical, because in addition to
inuencing policy and legislation, collaborative research into a low-carbon
and zero-waste future will facilitate development of a responsive plan for
transforming existing cities. It is therefore critical that our efforts support
long-term planning and research that is consistent with agreed national
priorities, if holistic whole-of-life cycle approaches and a transformed
construction and development sector are to be achieved.
We need a new, higher-quality level of debate and discussion between
economists, planners, scientists, social scientists, and decision makers that
leads to transparent governance, smart regulations, scientic accuracy,
and broad participation. We should also broaden our denition of gross
domestic product to take account of natural resources and view economic
growth and sustainability as complementary rather than competing goals.
To do this effectively, we need research that helps us understand motivation
and commitment, so that we can better understand what motivates people
to aspire to sustainable living. This involves technological change, but much
more importantly behavioral change.
In order to meet the global challenges identied in this chapter, more
investment is also needed in research, innovation, education, and training.
Much of the work being undertaken at the University of South Australia is
about developing better models, making recommendations, and establishing
best practice guidelines to help cities and municipalities improve their urban
governance and sustainability plans during this difcult transition phase. We
are convinced that the cities of Asia and the Pacic can use rapid urban
development to their advantage, and possibly become global exemplars of
green eco-cities (Figures 2.4 and 2.5).
Figure 2.4 Diagram of the Eco-City
Source: Lehmann (2010a).
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 129
The eco-city is characterized by interlinked challenges and a healthy
balance and equilibrium (symbiosis) between the urban core and its rural
hinterland. There is an urban growth boundary that respects and protects
precious farmland and forests, and prevents the city from growth at the
expense of its surrounding landscape and supporting agricultural system
(Lehmann 2010a.)
Annual CO
2
emissions of an average four-person household in Germany
produce approximately 43.5 tons of CO
2
. At 25%, the percentage share
Figure 2.5 Annual CO
2
Emissions
Source: Lehmann (2010a).
An average 4 person household in Germany produces around 43.5 tons
of CO
2
emissions per year
EMISSION STOCK OF GOVERNMENT,
DIVIDED BY POPULATION 4.96
HEATING 7.88
ELECTRICITY GENERATION 3.00
PRIVATE VEHICLES 6.24
PUBLIC TRANSPORT 0.44
AIR TRAFFIC 3.40
FOOD SUPPLY 6.60
CONSUMPTION 11.00
130 Green Cities
of general consumption in total CO
2
emissions is by far the largest of all
sources of CO
2
emissions, and is also the source that is most inuenced by
behavior and lifestyle (Lehmann 2010a, after Umweltbundesamt 2009)
Conclusion and Outlook
The challenge is that almost every aspect of modern civilization is still
powered by fossil fuels, and the abatement in CO
2
emissions has thus far
been minuscule. The ideas in this chapter are an initial step to improving
understanding of the complexities of city dynamics within the context of
urban material ows and waste management. Additional research is needed
to gain a better understanding of the drivers inuencing the sociopolitical,
economic, and environmental aspects of urban waste: the urban metabolism.
To resolve the issue of global warming, we need to concentrate on
innovating more affordable green technology through a massive increase in
research and development. It has become obvious that we will get nowhere
until we can make green technologies and processes less expensive than
fossil fuels. Recent history suggests that when living standards in the
developing world go up, people and societies reduce their polluting behavior,
stop cutting down forests, and have fewer children. In short, helping people
in the developing world to emerge from poverty is one of the best things we
can do for the environment.
This chapter advocates an innovation-centered approach that focuses
on material efciency, construction technology, and behavior change as the
primary vehicles for scaling up clean-energy and zero-waste technologies.
Each city needs to develop its own targets and implement its own low-carbon
development plan to become a low- to no-carbon and zero-waste city. We
have now reached a tipping point at which our larger agenda of sustainable
urban development requires the planning and urban design professions to
take a leading role in working with the government to reduce our high levels
of consumption and resource waste.
Zero waste requires new designs for the built environment that address
resource scarcity in order to inuence our behavior in a way that reduces our
consumption of materials and ecological footprint, and thence greenhouse
gas emissions. The concept of the zero-waste city is a way of thinking that
will become even more commonplace and important as our cities, urban
population, and related consumption levels keep increasing.
The rapidly growing cities of Asia and the Pacic are in a unique historical
position to dene and shape forward-thinking ideas about optimized
urbanization and urban management that avoid the mistakes made in the
Urban Metabolism and the Zero-Waste City 131
western world during the 20th century. Our governments need to implement
visionary policies that draw on available research in order to achieve an
energy-efcient, low-carbon, zero-waste economy that is not dependent on
fossil fuels.
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136
CHAPTER 3
Energy Strategy for
Green Cities
by Thomas Hurst, Debra Lam, and Malcolm Ball
Introduction
Energy has fueled societal development since time immemorial. However,
only when we learned to harness, store, and use energy on a signicant
scale did the pace of development accelerate. One of the major factors that
facilitated the Industrial Revolution was access to cheap and plentiful fossil-
fuel energy. This revolutionized the way we traveled, worked, and consumed
goods and servicesindeed, every aspect of our lives. Fossil fuels enabled
rapid personal transport over long distances, machines with more power
than any team of horses, and mass production of materials and products
that raised our quality of life. However, all of this increased our demand
for energy.
Ultimately, the creature comforts that widespread access to energy
delivered came at signicant social and environmental cost, including
climate change, air and water pollution, acid rain, and deforestation. In the
political sphere, the realization that fossil fuels are ultimately nite in supply
created international political upheaval and war. However, as long as the
fossil-fuel energy kept owing, we were able in the short term to ignore the
inevitability of its depletion, that it would become increasingly difcult and
expensive to extract, and that one day our energy supply would become
open to disruption by parties over whom we had little or no control.
While our societal development continues to depend on access to
energy, three issues surrounding it have changed the way we think about
it and use it. These are (i) security of supply, (ii) price, and (iii) the carbon
intensity of our development trajectory. Nowhere are these issues more
pressing than in our cities, which account for the bulk of the greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions that drive climate change. International pressures, national
legislation, and growing public awareness of climate change, air pollution,
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 137
and environmental degradation are all requiring a change in approach to
fueling our cities, and ultimately, energy-use solutions consistent with long-
term environmental sustainability.
While individual cities have traditionally had limited control over their
energy-use patterns, todays urban air pollution levels and degree of
vulnerability to the long-term negative impacts of climate change have
caused cities to take a greater leadership role in their modes of energy use.
In addition to formulating carbon-use targets and seeking opportunities for
green urban development, some cities are implementing bold policy regimes
and investments that support low-carbon growth trajectories, these being
underpinned by creative nancing arrangements.
However, formulating a holistic, long-term, urban energy strategy
appropriate to a particular citys context requires considerable effort. In
fact, successful strategies of this type are preceded by three major phases
of development: (i) building a knowledge base, (ii) performing a strategy
analysis, and (iii) formulating low-carbon-use programs. In this regard,
many cities can make use of the experience gained in other urban settings
throughout the world.
While this chapter is replete with numerous examples of energy
strategies that have been successfully implemented in cities around the
world, the examples presented by no means represent an exhaustive list
of opportunities for formulating urban energy-use strategies. Cooperation
at the international level in this regard has allowed successful energy-use
strategies and best practices to be shared globally. Ultimately, a key goal of
this chapter is to demonstrate that the cities of Asia and the Pacic are well
positioned to achieve their energy-use goals.
The Three Factors that Impact Energy Strategy
Three major factors determine both attitudes toward, and decisions
regarding, energy use, supply, and sustainability. These are (i) security of
supply, (ii) price, and (iii) the carbon intensity of the development trajectory.
Each of these three factors is associated with a particular set of issues and
considerations (Figure 3.1).
Security-of-supply issues are driven by concerns regarding (i) energy
security, (ii) independence, and (iii) the nite nature of the global oil supply.
The considerations relating to security-of-supply issues that must be
addressed include (a) the type(s) of fuel to be used and their source(s) of
supply, (b) the degree of diversication of the energy supply by fuel type that
is desired, and (c) the geopolitical context and changes in it that impact the
supply of energy.
138 Green Cities
Price issues are driven by concerns regarding (i) the affordability of
energy, (ii) the need to fund infrastructure development, and (iii) the need
for research and development. The considerations relating to price issues
include (a) fuel costs, (b) fuel accessibility, (c) replacement of assets, and
(d) the level of fuel price subsidy to be applied and how this subsidy is
distributed across a countrys social strata.
The carbon intensity of the development trajectory factor is essentially
driven by the (i) security-of-supply and (ii) price-issue factors referred to
above, as well as (iii) climate-change and pollution issues. The considerations
relating to this factor include (a) choices regarding renewable energy
technology, (b) the degree of support given to the latter, (c) the means of
integrating renewable energy technology into the existing energy supply,
and (d) development of technologies that further enable reductions in
carbon-intensive, energy-use patterns.
Security of Supply
Issues
Energy Security
Independence
Peak Oil
Consideration
Fuel type/Fuel source/Geopolitics/
Diversication
Price
Issues
Affordability
Infrastructure Development
R&D
Consideration
Fuel type/Fuel Poverty/Fuel Accessibility/
Asset Replacement/Subsidy
Low Carbon
Issues
Climate Change Mitigation
Environmental Impacts
Intermittency
Consideration
Renewable Choice/Renewable Support/
Integrating Existing Systems/
Enabling Technologies
Figure 3.1 The Three Factors that Determine Energy Use, Supply,
and Sustainability
R&D = research and development.
Source: Arup.
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 139
Box 3.1 The Trilemma of Energy Sustainability
The manner in which the three factors impact a particular countrys energy
strategy has been assessed by the World Energy Council (WEC). Specifically,
in its 2011 Assessment of Country Energy and Climate Policies (WEC 2011), the
WEC used quantitative analysis to assess the attitude of particular countries
toward (i) energy security, (ii) environmental impact mitigation, and (iii) social
equity (i.e., affordability of and access to energy).
WECs use of quantitative analysis in performing this assessment allowed the
results for each country to be reported in a single summary statistic known as
the Energy Sustainability Index. Because of the inherent trade-offs between (i),
(ii), and (iii), when referred to as a group, these three variables are often termed
the trilemma of energy sustainability that all countries face. In comparing the
Energy Sustainability Index of the countries included in the assessment, the
WEC found that the countries assessed fell into three distinct groups.
Group 1 countries are heavily focused on social equity. Since this goal is usually
achieved through the use of energy subsidies, performance in the other two
indicators is generally poor. Group 2 countries are, for the most part, resource-
poor, and have achieved only low levels of industrialization. Nevertheless, some
of the Group 2 countries are significantly focused on adopting low-carbon
technologies, which results in high scores in environmental impact mitigation
for Group 2 overall, but poor performance in social equity. Group 3 largely
comprises developed countries that are attempting to maintain or improve
energy security and social equity, while simultaneously improving low-carbon
performance and planning for future reductions in carbon-use intensity. As a
result, Group 3 scores in social equity and energy security are relatively high,
with scores in environmental impact mitigation being somewhat lower.
For purposes of demonstrating the diversity of energy strategies within Asia
and the Pacific, the groups into which some of Asian Development Banks
developing member countries fall are shown below.
Group 1: the Peoples Republic of China; India; the Republic of Korea; Mongolia;
Pakistan; Taipei,China; Thailand
Group 2: Nepal, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan
Group 3: Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, the Philippines
Source: World Energy Council. 2011. Policies for the Future: 2011 Assessment of Country Energy and
Climate Policies. London.
The three factors that impact energy strategy are closely interrelated
(see Box 3.1). They thus interact with one another, as well as with the wider
urban system. Further, a change in the parameters affecting one of these
factors can cause a reaction in one or both of the others. Similarly, the
relationships between these three factors manifest themselves differently
140 Green Cities
in different cities and countries. The manner in which these relationships
manifest themselves is often inuenced by the income level of the country
concerned. However, other variables, such as geography or even type of
governance system, may likewise profoundly impact the manner in which
the three factors interact with one another. These three factors that impact a
particular jurisdictions energy strategy are discussed in greater detail.
Security of Supply
Global demand for energy is increasing rapidly and is forecast to grow by
1.2% annually between 2010 and 2035. Further, more than 90% of this
projected growth is expected to come from countries other than those
belonging to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) grouping (IEA 2011). As energy supplies from conventional sources
become more constrained, fossil-fuel reserves become increasingly unable
to meet global demand. The inevitable result is rising energy prices (BP
2011). Finally, the fossil fuels on which many countries have placed great
reliance are still mainly sourced from areas of increasing political instability,
which translates into price volatility over the medium term.
As a result of the above, many leaders now face difcult decisions as
to how best address the possibility of their energy supplies becoming
prohibitively expensive or cut off altogether in the face of international political
upheaval. Many countries are attempting to address this security-of-supply
issue by increasing the supply of energy drawn from sources within their own
borders. The growing interest of the United States (US) in exploiting its Alaska
oil reserves and its enthusiastic pursuit of shale gas provides but one example
of this (The New York Times 2012). Others are forging closer political ties with
energy-abundant countries, such as the interest of the Peoples Republic of
China (PRC) and India in oil-rich African nations (BBC Business News 2012).
However, such a strategy supports continuing dependence on traditional
sources of energy.
Ultimately, the key to meeting growing future energy demand lies in
obtaining energy from clean, nontraditional sources, particularly those that
are effectively limitless and unimpacted by geopolitical considerations.
However, diversication of energy supply must transcend traditional fossil-
fuel and nuclear sources and extend into solar, wind, geothermal, ocean-
wave, and tidal energy sources. One important medium-term constraint
to such diversication is that large-scale integration of renewable energy
sources stresses the existing transmission and distribution infrastructure.
Additional investment in such facilities is thus required to relax this constraint.
Further barriers to diversifying the sources from which our energy supply
is drawn include the time cost and monetary cost of further technological
development of renewable energy sources, and the time intensity of inducing
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 141
behavioral change at the societal level. While relatively cheap fossil fuels
might seem an attractive low-cost, short-term solution to meeting growing
energy demand, its benets must be weighed against possible uncertainty
of supply or unexpected price uctuations resulting from unforeseeable
geopolitical events. Ultimately, the cost of adapting existing infrastructure to
expand the supply of energy from renewable sources might in the end turn
out to be a small price to pay for increased security of supply.
Price
It is difcult to separate security-of-supply and price issues, as they are
closely related. However, the manner in which energy has traditionally been
priced causes the nancial cost of energy from renewable sources to exceed
that of fossil fuels. This makes it particularly difcult for developing countries
with limited funds to transition to large-scale sourcing of energy from
renewable sources. This is likewise true of developed countries recovering
from economic recession, and particularly so for those accustomed to
relatively cheap energy sourced from fossil fuels. The geopolitical difculties
associated with securing what was once an easy and accessible supply of
fossil fuels have caused prices to increase, particularly in the face of regional
upheavals such as the Arab spring (Middlebrook et al. 2011).
As a result of the above, policy makers at the national level must
now address a number of cost-related issues simultaneously. Examples
include (i) how to price energy from traditional versus renewable sources,
(ii) which renewable energy technology to invest in or catalyze investment in,
(iii) whether to invest in maintaining existing infrastructure or installing
new equipment that facilitates obtaining energy from renewable sources,
and (iv) the degree to which nancial or other support should be provided
to research and development. Perhaps the most important questions of this
type relate to social equity. For example, to what degree should such
additional costs be borne by energy consumers? And, given that consumers
are to bear them, which consumers? In other words, should energy use
be subsidized at all? If so, to what degree? Which consumers should be
subsidized and to what extent?
Given the important role that energy plays in achieving and maintaining
the quality of life and alleviating poverty, many governments have historically
subsidized fossil fuels. However, recent research has shown that such
subsidies (i) often fail to meet their stated objectives, (ii) are in some cases
detrimental in that they encourage lavish energy use, (iii) discourage
investment in energy infrastructure, (iv) drain the state budgets of net energy
importers, (v) increase GHG emissions, and (vi) increase air pollution at the
local level (IEA 2011b). Finally, with fossil-fuel subsidy levels 12 times those
of energy from renewable sources in 2009, energy from renewable sources
142 Green Cities
faces unfair competition with fossil fuels, the prices of which have been
articially lowered in relative terms (Bloomberg 2010, EurActiv 2011).
Historically, the pricing of fossil fuels has failed to take into account
the full cost of their use. Instead, fossil-fuel prices have only captured the
costs of extraction, downstream processing, and transport. Such a pricing
regime ignores (i) the length of time required for the production of fossil
fuels, which is measured in thousands of years; (ii) their nite supply; and
(iii) the environmental costs associated with their use. Pricing fossil fuels in
this manner further results in unfair price competition between fossil fuels
and energy produced from renewable sources.
Nevertheless, the cost of energy generation from renewable sources has
fallen considerably in past decades, and is likely to continue falling. Indeed,
on a per kilowatt basis, newly installed onshore wind power generation
is now actually cheaper than generation from newly installed coal power
plants, while at the same time, global fossil-fuel prices have risen to record
levels (BNEF 2011b, BP 2011). These changes suggest that it may soon
be appropriate to reassess levels of support for traditional fossil fuels
and energy from renewable sources. The signicant increases in the level
of support for renewable energy that have occurred in the face of recent
economic events seem to be vindicated by the forecast that every additional
dollar spent on clean energy could produce $3 worth of fuel savings by the
year 2050 (UNEP 2011a, IEA 2012).
Carbon Intensity of the Development Trajectory
Security of supply and price are the two major factors driving increasing
interest in low-carbon forms of energy. Together with socio-environmental
concerns and growing public awareness of the unsustainability of large-
scale fossil-fuel use, these two factors are driving both city-level and
national governments to increasingly turn to low-carbon, renewable sources
of energy. At the city level, the low-carbon interventions commonly pursued
include photovoltaic panels, solar water heating, combined heat and
power generation (CHP or cogeneration), use of biofuels, and smart-grid
technology, all of these being discussed in detail in section VII.
As a result of both falling costs and increasing policy support, growth
in energy output from low-carbon, renewable sources is unprecedented
(Figure 3.2). Between 2005 and 2010, global grid-connected photovoltaic
capacity grew by 60%, while global wind power capacity grew by 27%
(REN21 2011). At nearly $187 billion in 2010, total clean-energy asset
nance and small, distributed-capacity investment (mainly rooftop solar
panels) nearly matched the amount invested in fossil-fuel generating
capacity at $219 billion (UNEP 2011b). This translated into nearly half of
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 143
the 194 gigawatts of new power generation capacity installed globally
during 2010. Despite this recent growth in renewable energy capacity, the
percentage share of fossil fuels in global nal energy consumption in 2010
still reached 80.6%. Thus, in terms of global nal energy consumption, fossil
fuels still dominate (REN21 2012).
While the growth in the share of renewables in total power generation
in Asia and the Pacic has been less rapid than that of other regions, this is
likely to change substantially of the coming decades. By 2014, the PRC will
most probably lead the world in investment in renewable energy, though the
Figure 3.2 Percentage Share of Non-Hydro, Renewable Energy Sources
Used in Total Power Generation by Geographic Region
Notes:
1. Renewable percentages do not include generation from hydropower.
2. Except for minimal negative growth for Central and South America during the period 20102011,
all regions show positive growth in the percentage share of energy derived from non-hydro
renewable sources.
Source: BP. 2012. Statistical Review of World Energy 2012.
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Europe and Eurasia
South and Central America
North America
World
Asia and the Pacifc
Africa
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144 Green Cities
greatest overall growth will likely occur in Africa, India, the Middle East, and
Latin America (BNEF 2011a).
In addition to falling costs and contribution to energy self-sufciency at
the national level, renewable energy sources have the added advantage of
independence from aging, strained electricity transmission networks since
they generate energy on-site rather that at a distant location. This gives an
additional layer of security of supply to the urban areas that employ them
that fossil-fuel sources cannot.
There remain questions concerning the intermittency of renewable
energy sources, as well as their integration with existing infrastructure, that
must be addressed before renewable energy can achieve its full potential
in a citys total energy supply mix. However, current research suggests that
at least 30% of generation can be met by wind and solar using existing
infrastructure and currently available technologies (NREL 2010). Given that
non-hydro renewables contributed only 5% to global electricity production
in 2010, there arguably remains signicant room for expansion before
integration issues become widespread (REN21 2012).
Impact on Cities
As national economic hubs and the source of most economic growth, cities
are the locales in which initiatives for improving the quality of life are likely
to have their greatest benecial impacts. Similarly, because they drive
much of a countrys total demand for energy, they typically exert signicant
inuence over national energy policy. They can thus play an important role
in developing a resilient national energy strategy. Likewise, due to their
high concentrations of population, assets, and goods, and their tendency
to be located near deposits of natural resources and bodies of water, they
often are particularly vulnerable to climate-related disasters. They are thus
the locales in which initiatives for mitigating the negative consequences of
climate change are likely to have their most benecial effects.
The Contribution of Cities to Global Greenhouse Gas
Emissions and Climate Change
Because of their role in driving economic growth as well as social and
technological development, cities are major consumers of both natural
resources and energy (IEA 2008). However, the rapid economic and social
development cities have produced has often taken place with little regard
to either the direct or indirect impacts of their resource consumption. This
has led to resource depletion, climate change, air pollution, and negative
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 145
changes in land-use patterns, these ultimately becoming some of the
greatest international concerns of the modern age (UNEP 2011a). Cities
may therefore be thought of as one of the major causes of the difculties
we now face with regard to the widespread use of traditional sources of
energy. That said, in high-income countries, per-capita energy intensities are
typically lower in cities than for the country overall. However, in developing
countries that are urbanizing rapidly, such as the PRC, rising per-capita
income translates into signicant increases in the demand for energy, thus
raising urban per-capita energy intensities relative to rural areas (IEA 2008).
While cities today account for only 2% of the earths total land mass,
they are home to roughly 50% of the worlds population. They thus account
for approximately two-thirds of total global energy consumption, and
approximately 70% of total GHG emissions (UN-HABITAT 2011, IEA 2008).
Current urban population forecasts suggest that by 2015, the population of
23 of the worlds cities will exceed 10 million, 11 of these being Asian cities
(CITYNET 2012).
Ultimately, there is a direct relationship between the amount of energy
consumed and the amount of pollution released. Thus, if the global urban
population growth referred to earlier continues to rely on historical urban
energy sourcing and consumption patterns, the amount of emissions
that would be released would greatly magnify the air pollution and GHG
challenges we face today. Preventing future environmental challenges on
such a scale implies an urgent need to decouple our desired future economic
growth and quality of life from our reliance on traditional sources of energy
(UNEP 2011a).
Cities Will Be Most Affected by Climate Change
In the absence of the decoupling referred to earlier, global climate change will
intensify, and, along with it, its negative environmental impacts. Due to their
inherent concentrations of population, infrastructure, and cultural wealth, it
is the worlds cities that will bear the brunt of such impacts. Seventy-ve
percent of the worlds cities are located in coastal areas. These are thus the
areas that will be the most vulnerable to sea-level rise, storms of increasing
ferocity, and inland ooding (C40 2011).
The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacic (2010) reports that the frequency of global disasters has increased
markedly over recent decades. While 1,690 such events occurred during
19801989, the corresponding number for 19992009 is 3,886. Furthermore,
the people of Asia and the Pacic were four times more likely to be affected
by such events as those living in Africa, and 25 times more likely than
inhabitants of Europe and North America. Similarly, while Asia and the Pacic
146 Green Cities
generated one-quarter of the worlds gross domestic product (GDP) during
19802009, it suffered 85% of the deaths and 38% of global economic
losses over that period. The implication of such statistics is that over the
past 12 years, such disasters occurring in developed areas caused some
of the greatest economic impacts, while disasters occurring in developing
countries led to the greatest losses of human life (UNISDR 2012).
Overall, the implication of the above is that cities can be the most
dangerous places to live in terms of losses from climate-related disasters
(IFRCRCS 2010). This is particularly true in light of the prospect of increasing
intensity of climate-related disasters in the future, and greater temperature
extremes. Unfortunately, it is the urban poor, and particularly those living in
slums in developing countries that are likely to be the most affected by the
negative impacts of climate change (UN-HABITAT 2012).
Cities Have the Greatest Opportunity
to Prevent Climate Change
The above notwithstanding, the fact that cities account for the bulk of global
GHG emissions gives rise to a unique opportunity for urban areas to take
the lead in their reduction, and thus to contribute signicantly to mitigating
both climate change and its negative impacts. This is particularly true when
urbanization is coupled with good governance. This opportunity has not
been lost on policy makers in numerous cities around the world. In fact, in
many cities, interest in the notion of green growth is growing, as it is seen
as a viable path to sustained economic growth and quality of life (GGGI
2012). The successes of Copenhagens green sector in producing a wide
range of benets for both the environment and the economy alike provides
but one example of this change in perception (GGL 2011).
Ultimately, switching to environment-friendly sources of energy can bring
benets in addition to those accruing to the local and global environment,
as it has the potential to create green collar jobs in environment-related
businesses that would not have otherwise existed (GFA 2012). In some cases,
the desirability of green growth has even been recognized directly at the
national level, such as in the declaration of the Government of the Republic of
Korea that low-carbon green growth is a national vision (GGK 2012).
Annual investment in low-carbon technology is expected to grow rapidly
in the future, with up to $460 billion being invested globally in renewable
energy projects by 2030 (BNEF 2011a). This represents an immediate
economic opportunity for cities, in that building a broad base of expertise
in this area now would provide such cities with a competitive advantage
in the renewable energy industry in the future. Another benet of such a
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 147
strategy is the future capability to export green-growth knowledge and
intellectual capital to other locales. This would be particularly benecial to a
citys economic base, since the export market for green-energy technology
is likely to be global, thus allowing this economic sectoras well as the jobs
it createsto grow without limit (GFA 2012).
In the same way that the Stern Review (Stern 2006) has quantied the value
of global climate change mitigation, carbon savings have been found to
directly generate nancial value for cities that undertake them (Gouldson
2012). For example, exploiting protable opportunities in decarbonizing
the Leeds City Region of the United Kingdom would require investments
of 0.9% of GDP each year for 10 years, but would generate direct annual
savings of 1.6% of GDP. Thus, every $1.6 billion invested in low-carbon
solutions would generate $350 million in energy cost savings per year. It
would likewise create 1,000 jobs and deliver other benets to the economy
valued at $80 million annually (Gouldson 2012).
Realization of such benets without restricting access to the social and
economic benets of urban areas is a key goal for the future. Decoupling
energy use from economic advance is possible, given well-planned,
concerted, energy-related initiatives on the part of urban policy makers
(UNEP 2011a).
City Leadership
In light of the information presented thus far in this chapter, cities without
doubt face considerable challenges. However, in the past few years alone,
impressive initiatives for addressing climate change have been undertaken
by cities. For example, according to a report by the C40 Cities Climate
Leadership Group (C40), its participating members have collectively
implemented more than 3,500 climate-related initiatives since 2005 (C40
2011). Given that the groups member cities represent 8% of the global
population, 21% of global GDP, and account for 12% of global GHG
emissions, the potential impact of such initiatives is likely signicant.
A key nding of this research was that different types of energy-related
initiatives are undertaken by cities in low-income countries versus higher-
income countries. While the former focus on projects and programs, the
latter also focus on changes in policy and regulation that are coupled with
nancial incentives.
Appropriate changes in policy and regulation have been relatively
successful in driving uptake of renewable energy technologies, and at the
city level, have led to desired changes (IEA 2012). However, the impact
148 Green Cities
of national-level policies has been weaker in this regard. These changes
in energy-related policy support behavioral change in innovative ways,
particularly when coupled with appropriate funding.
C40 Report Findings
The C40 report summarized the ndings of a survey of member cities that
evaluated the policies, programs, and powers of mayors in a number of
sectors, including transport, planning, food and urban agriculture, energy
supply, nance, and adaptation to climate change (C40 2011b). In the
majority of the cities surveyed, the powers that mayors held over matters
relating to energy supply were relatively weak. This outcome was mainly
due to several factors. First, the electric power transmission and distribution
infrastructure is usually administered by government agencies at the regional
level or above. Second, most electricity generation takes place outside city
boundaries, which restricts the power of mayors over such activity. Further,
power generation, transmission, and distribution are typically undertaken by
private companies.
Nevertheless, in a number of cases, mayors had some inuence over
generation of both electricity and heat within the city limits. Furthermore,
because cities typically exercise signicant control over waste management
activities, the report found that member cities had taken the most direct
action in putting into place waste-to-energy and landll gas-capture
initiatives. Similarly, the inuence of member cities over solar power
generation was signicant, as cities generally exercise direct control over
the placement of solar panels on the rooftops of buildings. Finally, one of the
areas in which member cities were able to exercise the greatest amount of
inuence was that of policy at levels of government above their own. This
was mainly due to the fact that such member cities were able to formulate a
long-term vision applicable to their broader jurisdictions.
Despite the limitations on the various powers discussed above, a number
of member cities were still able to implement ambitious energy-related
initiatives, thus demonstrating the potential benecial impact of green-
energy policies in other locales. Indeed, based on the initiatives either under
way or committed to by member cities, the reduction in the collective annual
emissions of the C40 cities will total 248 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO
2
)
by 2020 (C40 2012).
Policy and Regulation
Since cities are often at the center of policy and regulatory activity relating
to energy, the impact of policy and regulation on the uptake of renewable
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 149
energy technology has been signicant throughout the world (REN21
2011). This suggests that their impact on the uptake of other low-carbon
interventions would be similar. This is partly because well-formulated
and -implemented policy and regulation can directly address security-
of-supply issues, and ensure a plentiful supply of affordable energy while
simultaneously successfully implementing a low-carbon agenda.
Globally, 98 countries had policy targets relating to renewable
energy in 2010, with 87 states, provinces, or countries supporting these
targets with feed-in tariff policies, and 63 supporting such targets with
renewable portfolio standards or quotas (REN21 2011). This suggests that
to successfully achieve their goals, national policies must ultimately be
supported by implementation at the city level. In cases in which national
energy-related policies are either weak or do not exist at all, cities have
implemented their own energy policies and set their own targets. Cities are
thus implementing national renewable energy targets, and in some cases,
exceeding them (Figure 3.3).
Figure 3.3 Renewable Energy Uptake Targets for Select C40 Cities
MW = megawatt.
Sources: Renewable Energy Policy Network for the 21st Century (REN21). 2011. Renewables 2011
Global Status Report. REN21 Secretariat, Paris; Green For All (GFA). 2012.
The C40 report lists numerous incentives for the uptake of renewable
energy technology that are either in place, or are being planned. Examples
include feed-in tariffs, generation incentives, investment incentives, and
promotion of smart metering (C40 2011).
150 Green Cities
Changing our Relationship with Energy
In addition to encouraging the uptake of hard renewable energy technology,
achieving long-term environmental sustainability will require addressing
soft energy challenges as well, such as the need for society-wide
recognition that fossil-fuel energy is nite in supply, and that it is therefore a
precious resource that must be used sparingly.
Ultimately, the purpose of all policy and regulation is that of changing
some aspect of the behavior of the general populace. Indeed, up to 30% of
some cities carbon-use reductions are expected to result from behavioral
change (Arup 2011). As regards energy policy in the urban context, its goal is
largely that of changing behavioral patterns relating to energy consumption.
Examples include the choice of transport mode, the temperature at which
dwellings are maintained, or the timing or total magnitude of the demand
for energy of a particular type. Given that our current level of energy
consumption is unsustainable, a major target of behavioral change is that
of lower per-capita energy consumption levels (IEA 2011a). In some cases,
such as the majority of developed-country cities, the reduction in per-
capita energy consumption required for achieving long-term environmental
sustainability may be considerable, while that required of inhabitants of
cities in a developing country may be less substantial.
Such reductions in per-capita energy consumption will likely be achieved
through a combination of nancial incentives such as tax rebates or pricing
tariffs that reward the use of energy from renewable sources, and penalties
such as increased tax levels or nes in cases in which statutory per-capita
consumption limits are exceeded. The optimal mix of nancial incentives and
penalties is likely to vary considerably from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and
in large measure to be shaped by current per-capita energy consumption
and income levels in the jurisdiction in question. It is, of course, important to
remember that the benets of altering the behavior of energy suppliers is likely
to produce environmental benets of a similaror in some cases greater
magnitude as the benets resulting from altering consumer behavior.
Clean-Energy Investment in Cities
Because investment in clean-energy projects in cities typically results in cash
savings or direct prot, the scope for such investment by both the public and
private sector is substantial. According to the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), at the end of March 2011, $63.2 billion in private and
public sector money was managed by clean-energy funds (UNEP 2011b).
1
1
Clean-energy funds are dened as those that invest more than 50% of their total funding
in energy efciency or clean-energy projects.
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 151
While some of this funding was used to nance larger-scale, extra-urban
projects, a substantial portion of it was channeled into investment in urban
areas where the demand for renewable energy is greatest. The fact that for-
prot nancing for clean-energy initiatives even exists demonstrates that
such investments are not as risky as they are sometimes portrayed.
UNEP (2009) nds that private sector investment in renewable energy
initiatives in emerging markets can face numerous barriers, including
unstable political systems; lack of transparency in the legal, regulatory, tax, or
business environment; exchange-rate uctuations; and undeveloped energy
markets and infrastructure. However, appropriate due diligence can mitigate
such risks. Furthermore, public sector funding can be effective in nancing
renewable energy projects in such markets. In particular, well-thought-out
direct grants and loans at concessional or even commercial rates can be
excellent methods for bridging funding gaps, or for encouraging commercial
conancing that reduces private sector investor risk by shouldering a portion
of the total investment.
Despite the perceived riskiness of investment in clean-energy initiatives
in developing countries, in recent years, the greatest growth in such
investment has occurred in Asia and Oceania, with $59.3 billion being
invested in 2010, though of this amount the PRC accounted for $49 billion.
Figure 3.4 Investment in Renewable Energy by Region, 20042010
($ billion)
Source: United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). 2011. Global Trends in Renewable Energy
Investment 2011: Analysis of Trends and Issues in the Financing of Renewable Energy.
152 Green Cities
Investment in renewable energy projects by multilateral development
banks has likewise been signicant in recent years. In 2010, $11 billion
was collectively invested in such projects by the Asian Development Bank,
BNDES (the Brazilian Development Bank), the European Investment Bank,
and KfW (the German Bank for Reconstruction and Development), this
collective amount mainly comprising loan nancing (UNEP 2011b). While
these institutions in some cases offer loans at concessional rates, all of the
investments they underwrite must be protable to some degree.
Energy efciency funds are an increasingly popular means of nancing
energy efciency measures, particularly in Europe,
2
but also in Asia. Usually
supervised by a professional fund manager, these funds make relatively low-
interest loans for the installation of medium- to large-scale energy efciency
measures. Technical due diligence is typically undertaken prior to funding
such investments to ensure that an appropriate level of emissions savings
is achievable within a specied cost limit. For example, Londons Energy
Efciency Fund requires projects to deliver energy savings of at least 20% to
be eligible for investment. The fund aims to maximize carbon savings return
on investment by targeting projects that would be expected to deliver CO
2
savings at no more than $2,400 per ton of CO
2
(LEEF 2012).
Given appropriate verication of the viability of the energy efciency
projects they nance, energy efciency funds could theoretically be used to
nance such initiatives anywhere in the world. These nancing vehicles are
particularly benecial because they offer a stream of nancing for energy
efciency initiatives that is in addition to that provided by public sector
agencies. Further, because the nancing they provide is sourced from the
private sector, it is immune to the political pressures that public sector
energy agencies often face in allocating funding among projects.
One of the reasons energy efciency is seeing growing interest from
numerous investment sources is the level of protability it offers. For
example, appropriate energy efciency investments can permanently
reduce the annual energy demand of commercial buildings by 30% or more.
Depending on the type of technology installed, such investments have a
payback period of approximately 12 years (SDCL 2012).
Similarly, Gouldson and colleagues have found that by 2022, some
cities could reduce their 1990 levels of carbon emissions by 35% simply
by undertaking clean-energy investments that yield a positive rate of return.
2
Londons Energy Efciency Fund (LEEF), the Scottish Central Energy Efciency Fund
(CEEF), the European Energy Efciency Fund (EEEF); part of the European Energy Efciency
Facility (EEE-F).
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 153
When such investments that yield a zero rate of returni.e., cost-neutral
investmentsare likewise included in those undertaken, the 1990 levels of
CO
2
emissions for the cities in question could be reduced by up to 40%
(Gouldson 2012).
Energy Strategy
Collectively, the participating members of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership
Group have implemented more than 3,500 climate-related initiatives since
2005. While this is an admirable achievement, fully addressing the energy-
related challenges that all cities facewhether members of the C40 grouping
or notrequires formulation and implementation of a holistic energy strategy
that is based on three stages of development.
The rst of these is developing an appropriate knowledge base. This
is necessary to ensure that future energy-related decisions are based on
appropriate understanding of the challenges that must be addressed, full
knowledge of the impacts of the measures undertaken, and appropriate
criteria for measuring the degree to which such initiatives have achieved
their intended results.
The second stage is strategy synthesis, which entails determining the
most appropriate strategy for the city in question in all relevant dimensions.
The third stage consists of delivering the chosen strategy, which entails
implementing the measures the strategy comprises.
Figure 3.5 portrays the Energy Strategy Continuum and briey describes
these three stages of development, the key or leading skills required in
formulating and implementing such an energy strategy, and the stakeholders
involved during each developmental stage.
This process of strategy development is iterative, meaning that the
output of each initiative that comprises the strategy ends up informing
the next cycle of strategy development, thus increasing the efciency and
effectiveness of future iterations of strategy formulation and implementation.
154 Green Cities
Developing a Knowledge Base
Unfortunately, quantitative targets for energy consumption are often set
without relating them to the current situation of the city concerned. Such
targets may thus be inherently unachievable, or it may be impossible to
measure the progress made in achieving them. This outcome can be avoided
by ensuring that the knowledge base underpinning the energy strategy in
question is complete, meaning that it is based on appropriate analysis of
all of the factors likely to impact the strategys successful implementation.
For example, this would include the degree to which relevant
stakeholdersand in particular, political interestsare aware of the
energy strategys goals, and are in agreement with them. In this regard,
the potential contribution of political stakeholdersboth positive and
negativeto implementation of the strategy should not be underestimated,
since leadership that is committed to the strategy is vital to its successful
implementation.
All stakeholders should be involved to the maximum degree possible
from the outset of the strategy development process, their likely contribution
to this process being identied and openly communicated to them. Ultimately,
Figure 3.5 The Energy Strategy Continuum
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Source: Arup. 2012.
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 155
it is the degree to which stakeholders areand have beeninvolved in the
strategy development process that determines the degree to which they will
feel responsible for, and committed to achieving the quantitative targets the
strategy embodies.
Similarly, all gaps in the skill-base or other resources necessary for
successfully implementing the strategy must be transparently identied,
and measures for closing such gaps formulated and implemented. In this
regard, provisions must be made for any training required for the strategys
successful implementation.
Once all relevant stakeholders have been identied and committed to
the strategys successful implementation, work on the quantitative aspect
of the knowledge base underpinning the strategy must be completed.
For example, historical data pertaining to energy consumption should be
disaggregated by all variables relevant to the strategy. Similarly, all current
and future energy initiatives relevant to the strategy should be mapped in a
way that provides a graphic or otherwise easily grasped overview of their
interrelationships. Likewise, current and future supplies of energy should be
evaluated with regard to their likely future availability and reliability.
All sources and consumers of energy within the city must also be
identied. This requires assessing the existing building stock, mapping
of energy consumption and intensity by fuel source and mode of delivery
(electricity, gas, biomass), as well as mapping the availability of sources of
renewable energy, such as annual wind-speed and solar intensity levels.
Current and likely future levels of CO
2
emissions must also be assessed,
as should all other technical variables relevant to the strategys successful
implementation.
It is equally important to identify all current and future obligations of
the city in question, as well as all policies currently in place at the regional,
national, and international levels that might impact the strategys successful
implementation. The aspects of the energy system over which the city has
operational control should also be identied. For example, are transmission
and distribution grids controlled by the city government, the central
government, or a private sector monopoly provider?
From the above information, the CO
2
emission levels associated with
historical energy consumption patterns can be determined for all major
end-use consumers such as commercial buildings, transport facilities,
and industrial enterprises. This in turn allows the citys energy and carbon
footprint to be dened.
156 Green Cities
In short, an appropriate knowledge base would include all data and
information relating to the current status of energy use and emission levels,
as well as their likely future values. This is necessary to allow appropriate
assessment of both the current and future position of the city in question
under alternative energy-use and carbon-intensity scenarios. In the absence
of comprehensive baseline data and information such as those described,
measuring the progress achieved in meeting quantitative targets previously
set would be impossible, thus rendering the strategy in question meaningless.
Strategy Synthesis and Delivery
Strategy synthesis and delivery begins with identifying the major energy-
related issues the strategy is to address. These issues, as well as the
considerations that relate to them, will in all likelihood include the following
at the minimum:
Energy supply. Major considerations include (i) how expansion of
energy supply produced from renewable sources might be encouraged
or achieved; (ii) how decentralized energy sources might be further
developed, (iii) how development or expansion of CHP (Combined Heat
and Power) plants and district heating networks might be achieved or
encouraged; (iv) how access to alternative forms of low-carbon energy,
such as nuclear energy, carbon capture, or storage plants, might be
secured such as through feed-in tariffs that encourage installation of
domestic rooftop solar panels.
Resources. Major considerations include (i) how the energy intensity
of major end users, such as industrial facilities, might be reduced;
(ii) how waste management or recycling might be expanded to reduce
solid waste, for example, by restricting use of landlls or discouraging
their use through increased landll tariffs; and (iii) how waste-to-energy
infrastructure might be developed or expanded.
Building retrot. Major considerations include (i) how the energy
efciency of existing buildings might be encouraged, for example, by
mandating the use of building-integrated renewable energy sources;
and (ii) how differentials in energy intensity between the public, private-
commercial, and domestic sectors might be reduced, for example,
through performance assessments of energy efciency measures
currently in place in commercial buildings.
New construction. Major considerations include (i) what the form and
content of construction requirements that encourage reduced energy
consumption, lower carbon intensity, and increased energy efciency
might be; and (ii) how holistic spatial strategies that address multiple
issues might be developed, for example, through planning regulations
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 157
that specify minimum requirements for use of on-site sources of
renewable energy.
Smart solutions. Major considerations include (i) how implementation
of smart grids might be undertaken; (ii) which options are available to
policy makers for encouraging demand-side energy management and
energy storage; (iii) how information and communication technology
might be used to reduce consumption of energy by end users, for
example, through the installation of smart meters; and (iv) how
behavioral change on the part of all energy users might be encouraged,
for example, through the use of citywide information displays that show
real-time levels of energy consumption for the various economic sectors
or for individual buildings.
Links with transport. Considerations include (i) how the energy
intensity of public transport systems might be reduced through the use
of hybrid or electric vehicles; (ii) how price incentives for reducing energy
consumption or disincentives for excessive consumption might be
implemented; and (iii) how shifts in preferred modes of transport might
be induced, for example, by levying city-center congestion charges or
emissions penalties on vehicles.
Once the major energy-related issues to be addressed have been
identied and the considerations relating to them have been assessed,
proposals for specic initiatives that address these issues should then
be formulated. However, in formulating specic initiatives, it is important
that these not be developed in isolation of one another. Instead, the likely
impacts of each initiative on the successful implementation of each of
the others should be assessed. The viability of each initiative should then
be validated through the use of costbenet analysis. Once each of the
initiatives has been thus validated, the design of the overall strategy can be
completed, and quantitative targets set with reference to the baselines values
previously dened.
Delivery trajectories for the overall strategy that include the phasing
and timing of the initiatives it comprises should then be developed, and
implementation proposals outlined, these proposals then being subjected to
review by all stakeholders and verication of their nancial viability.
A plan for nancing the overall strategy should then be developed that
takes into account all nance options available to the city concerned. These
might include nancing from pension funds, other publicly available money,
or even venture capital. Other sources of nance might include national-
government agencies, international nance corporations, or private sector
charities. Specic governance or delivery vehicles may be required to
satisfy the demands of particular stakeholders. Once appropriate nancing
158 Green Cities
has been obtained and any required governance or delivery vehicles have
been formulated, procedures for managing procurement will need to be
formulated and put into place.
Ultimately, some form of project management is generally required
to ensure successful implementation of all projects undertaken under the
strategy. This includes monitoring, evaluation, and reporting procedures
for ensuring that project milestones are achieved, or that policy changes
result in their desired impact. This also allows any errors to be corrected in
a timely fashion, and lessons learned from strategy implementation to be
transparently communicated.
Delivery of the strategy will in all likelihood require a broad range of skill-
sets. This often includes those of accountants, commercial experts, lawyers,
policy analysts, project managers, and technical advisers. All of these
experts must be able to work effectively with the entire range of stakeholders
involved in delivering the strategy. If implemented appropriately, this nal
stage results in a seamless transition back to the rst stage of the strategy
formulation process. At this point, quantitative baseline values should be
updated and targets reset, thus allowing identication of the goals of the
subsequent round of strategy formulation by policy makers, and hence its
implementation.
Toward Energy-Smart Cities
Ultimately, technologies for reducing the carbon footprint of cities already
exist, are in use, or are under development (OECD 2011). Thus, energy-smart
cities are those that implement all of these technologies that are appropriate
to successful implementation of their energy strategies, and that consider any
complementarities between these and other vehicles for achieving long-term
environmental sustainability such as waste and water management.
This section briey reviews the state-of-the-art energy technologies
that are currently in use worldwide, as well as those in advanced stages of
development that might be used during the strategy delivery stage of the
Energy Strategy Continuum described earlier. It also provides examples of
interventions used by cities to encourage uptake of these technologies.
Energy Efciency
Because energy efciency always carries with it negative rather than positive
abatement costs, it should always be given high priority by policy makers.
That is, rather than requiring a nancial outlay to reduce CO
2
emissions
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 159
by, say, 1 kilogram, energy efciency initiatives instead achieve this goal
by actually reducing nancial outlays, thus saving money (McKinsey &
Company 2009). Further, energy efciency is a powerful tool for reducing
GHG emissions. For example, the International Energy Agency (IEA)
estimates that when combined with power-generation efciency and fuel-
switching, end-use fuel and electricity efciency can contribute up to 43%
of GHG emissions savings to the year 2050 (IEA 2010).
Energy efciency also produces additional economic benets in that
by reducing demand it postpones or negates the need for expanding
electrical generation capacity. However, this is only true if the manner in
which it is implemented prevents rebound effects. Such effects occur
when behavioral considerations prevent energy efciency improvements
from delivering expected reductions in energy consumption. For example,
if efciency improvements lower the cost of electricity, this could cause
power consumption to increase, thus offsettingor even overwhelming
any potential savings from the energy efciency improvements undertaken
(WEC 2011).
While skyscrapers in Hong Kong, China use signicant amounts of energy, the citys Buildings Energy
Efciency Funding Schemes program has reduced CO
2
emissions by thousands of tons since 1995.
P
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A
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160 Green Cities
The long-running Buildings Energy Efciency Funding Schemes (BEEFS)
program in Hong Kong, China, which ran from 1995 until early 2012, provides
an excellent example of a successful energy efciency initiative. Under the
program, existing building owners were encouraged to carry out energy and
carbon audits, and to use the information generated by them to identify
opportunities for energy efciency improvements and emissions savings,
regardless of whether these buildings were used for residential, commercial,
or industrial purposes. Matching funding was provided under the scheme,
which ultimately saved 140 million kilowatt-hours of electricity, and thus
100,000 tons of CO
2
(Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region of the Peoples Republic of China 2012).
Decentralized Energy
Formerly, electricity networks typically generated power at central locations,
and then transmitted it over long distances to end users (World Alliance
for Decentralized Energy 2012). This led to signicant transmission and
distribution losses (EIA 2012). By generating electricity on-site, such losses
are avoided, as are any costs associated with expanding transmission
capacity. On-site power generation is also less impacted by extreme weather
events and is less likely to be affected by sabotage (Greenpeace 2005).
Decentralized energy systems are small-scale distribution networks
operating at the local or subregional level that deliver electricity from local
sources to end users. Energy technologies that can be used to power
decentralized energy systems include a range of renewable sources of
electricity generation such as wind turbines, solar panels, biomass, biofuels,
and geothermal energy. It is also possible to generate electricity for powering
such systems from waste, or in fossil-fueled CHP plants.
Small-scale wind turbines can be integrated into the urban environment
in a number of ways, such as installations on building rooftops or along road
or rail lines. While urban wind generation facilities must address issues such
as air turbulence, well-designed, well-located vertical-axis wind turbines
can contribute to urban low-carbon power generation (Babinsky 2012).
Solar power, particularly that provided from rooftop panels in urban
areas, can meet a portion of a citys energy requirements. In many locales,
solar-generated electricity power costs are approaching or have reached
parity with the cost of electricity supplied from national grids. Encouraged
by feed-in tariffs, European rooftop solar power generation increased by
120% between 2009 and 2010 (BNEF 2011c). In addition to rooftop panels,
integration of solar panels into glass building facades is one way of expanding
solar power generation in cities through retrots of existing buildings.
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 161
While energy sourced from biomass began with the human use of re, it
is the use of biofuels that has experienced particularly rapid growth in recent
years (REN21 2011). Other efcient non-fossil-fuel means of generating
energy include anaerobic digestion and gasication, both of which produce
biogas for use in existing natural gas applications (WEF 2011b). As long
as the biomass in question is sourced sustainably, these technologies can
contribute to a citys energy requirements in a way that leads to long-term
environmental sustainability.
Similarly, geothermal energy can be used for both heat and electricity
generation. Ground-source heat pumps can also harvest a form of
geothermal energy through shallow-depth boreholes. Such installations can
support citywide heat networks, or those of individual buildings. Iceland,
where 90% of the housing stock derives its heat from geothermal sources,
is sharing this technology with the PRC city of Xian, which is to be the PRCs
rst geothermal energy city (WEF 2011f).
Waste-to-energy technologies convert waste materials that would
otherwise be dumped in landlls into heat, gas, or electricity. As with
biomass, these technologies can convert numerous types of waste into heat
or electricity through anaerobic digestion, gasication, or direct combustion
in incinerators. Additionally, since the methane gas that landlls produce has
a chemical composition similar to that of natural gas, it can be trapped and
burned to produce heat or power (Adu-Gyam 2010).
An excellent example of the widespread use of solar power is that of
Rizhao City in the PRC, which has promoted the use of solar technologies
since 2001 through building regulations, and public engagement and
education. Current building regulations require solar energy equipment to be
designed, constructed, examined, and approved during new construction
to ensure that any technical problems are resolved prior to installation.
Currently, 99% of the buildings in Rizhaos urban areas and more than 30%
of houses in rural areas use solar water heaters (UNEP 2012). Furthermore,
most of the citys trafc signaling, street lighting, and park illumination is
powered by photovoltaic panels (WEF 2011g).
Energy-Smart Technologies
Energy-smart technologies are those that facilitate the efcient use of
energy. While in 2004, an estimated $1.3 billion was invested in energy-
smart technologies, this had grown to $5 billion by 2010, the corresponding
estimate for 5 years hence being $39.5 billion (UNEP 2011b). More than 100
energy-smart city projects are already under way worldwide, these being
particularly concentrated in Asia and the Pacic, Europe, and North America
(Figure 3.7; Greenbiz 2011). These include electricity storage, demand-
response systems, electric vehicles, smart metering, and smart grids.
162 Green Cities
One of the issues that must be addressed if the use of renewable sources
of energy continues to increase is that of intermittency. For example, periods
of calm cause wind-turbine generation to cease, and hours of darkness
prevent generation from solar panels. Moreover, during periods of low
demand but signicant availability from renewable sources, electricity may
be wasted. Similarly, during periods of high demand but low availability of
power from renewable sources, generation capacity is insufcient to meet
that demand. Electricity storage technologies address this problem through
a wide range, such as pumped-hydro storage, compressed-air energy
storage, batteries, and, to a lesser extent, ywheels (WEF 2011e).
Demand-response includes a range of technologies that address
uctuations in both demand and supply. Traditionally, peaks and troughs
in electricity demand have been managed on the supply side by generating
more or less power as appropriate. However, this causes large plants to
run inefciently at low levels of output. Demand-response technologies
work on the demand side, both at the consumer and industrial levels, by
automatically reducing consumption during periods of peak demand by
shifting demand to a time period during which more energy is available. This
can be achieved actively through connection to an information network, or
autonomously through the use appliances, such as refrigerators, that slightly
increase temperature set-points when the generation network is operating
at full capacity (WEF 2011d).
Figure 3.7 International Distribution of 102 Current Smart-City Projects
Asia and the Pacific
Middle East and Africa
Latin America
North America
Europe
Source: Greenbiz. 2011. Investment in Smart Cities on the Verge of a $40B Boom.
http://www.greenbiz.com
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 163
Because electricity from both fossil fuels and renewable sources of
energy can be used to charge their batteries, electric and plug-in hybrid
vehicles actually employ a combination of energy-storage and demand-
response technologies. Further, shifting their charging periods to times
of minimal electricity demand greatly reduces peak-system power
consumption. Similarly, during periods of peak demand, electric vehicles
connected to their charging units (i.e., operating in the vehicle-to-grid
mode) dispatch energy back through the network, thus reducing peak-
demand power-generation capacity requirements (V2G 2012).
Until recently, residential gas and electricity consumption was read
manually and periodically from meters. Consumers thus had little information
regarding the amount of energy they consumed or its cost during a particular
time period. This wastes money and causes CO
2
emissions that might
otherwise be prevented. Smart meters that provide real-time information
concerning energy use to consumers and suppliers alike enable consumers
to better manage their consumption, and suppliers to manage their systems
more accurately. Worldwide demand for such meters is growing rapidly
(WEF 2011a).
In many respects, smart grids incorporate a number of the energy-smart
solutions referred to above. By combining electric power networks with
advanced, two-way information communication technology and several of
the solutions described earlier, energy-smart grids are able to respond to
uctuations in both demand and supply, and encourage the use of renewable
energy technologies. As a result, energy-smart grids are being established
through the world (Figure 3.8).
An initiative of the city of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Smart City provides an
excellent example of the large-scale use of renewable sources of energy and
energy-smart technology (City of Amsterdam 2012). By generating public
interest in energy efciency, Amsterdam Smart City was able to incorporate
sustainable energy practices into virtually all aspects of the urban setting
on a signicant scale, including domestic and commercial buildings, public
spaces, and transport facilities. By creating partnerships with technology
providers, a number of energy efciency initiatives were able to be tested
on a commercial scale. This included smart meters and other energy
management technologies in homes, smart building technology in ofce
towers, and testing of smart electric-vehicle charging stations that ensure
that cars are not overcharged.
164 Green Cities
Heating and Cooling Technologies
While heating and cooling is necessary for human comfort, it contributes
signicantly to global warming. Together with water heating, space heating
and cooling are estimated to account for half of global energy consumption,
buildings themselves accounting for approximately one-third of global nal
energy consumption (REN21 2011). Because they account for such a large
share of total energy consumption, heating and cooling are components
of energy consumption that present signicant opportunities for reduction
in global emissions. Technologies that reduce the amount of energy
consumption required by heating and cooling include CHP plants, heat
pumps, solar water heating, and thermal storage.
CHP includes a number of technologies for simultaneously generating
heat and electricity, the benet of this being that simultaneous generation
of both is more energy-efcient than producing heat and power separately.
CHP plants use steam turbines driven by a heat source to generate electricity,
while simultaneously delivering the waste heat generated as a by-product of
electricity generation through a district heating network in the form of either
hot water or steam. While in some cases this waste heat is transmitted over
Figure 3.8 Smart Grid Projects Around the World
EU = European Union, = pound sterling, PRC = Peoples Republic of China, UK = United Kingdom,
US = United States.
Source: Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF). 2011. Imperial College Energy Futures Lab Annual
Lecture. Presentation by Michael Liebrich, Chief Executive, BNEF.
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 165
long distances to nal consumers, smaller, decentralized CHP units are also
used to supply heat to a single city through a local district heating distribution
network. In regions with signicant differences between annual minimum
and maximum temperatures, combined cooling, heating, and power (CCHP or
tri-generation) plants may be appropriate, although CCHP thus far remains an
emerging technology (WEF 2011c). While CHP and district heating networks
are in use worldwide, they are particularly popular in the Nordic countries
and parts of the former Soviet Union. For example, in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia,
central CHP plants supply approximately 1.8 gigawatt-thermal (GWth) of
district heating (Government of Mongolia 2011).
Currently, most CHP plants are powered by fossil fuels. However, it will
be possible in the future to power them with waste energy, large-scale CHP
plants that incorporate carbon capture and storage technologies, or large-
scale heat pumps driven by electricity supplied from low-carbon sources.
Using such energy sources to power CHP plants will result in signicant
carbon savings (DECC 2012).
Because of their inherent efciency, heat pumps deliver space heating
and cooling or hot water to the point of use, while simultaneously saving
signicant amounts of energy. In use worldwide for decades, they are entirely
compatible with using low-carbon, renewable energy sources since they are
powered by electricity (REN21 2011).
Solar water heating panels similar to these now provide 60% of the hot water used in Barcelonas newly
constructed buildings.
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166 Green Cities
The use of solar water heating is increasing rapidly, particularly in
developing countries, such as the PRC, where units totaling 118 GWth of
power are now installed (REN21 2011). This technology directly transfers
heat from the sun to water as it passes through special panels mounted on
rooftops, the hot water thus produced being stored in tanks.
An excellent example of the use of solar water heating on a signicant
scale is that of Barcelona. Following mapping of the citys solar resource
availability, engineers determined that 1 square meter of solar water heating
space was, on average, required to fulll the domestic hot water requirements
of each of the citys inhabitants. The engineers also determined that the
citys existing housing apartments on average had 43 square meters of
terrace available for solar water heating units. Following this, the city began
requiring all new buildings to provide 60% of the hot water they used from
solar water heaters. This resulted in a signicant amount of rooftop space
being used to generate hot water (WEF 2011g).
In addition to solar heating, solar cooling has seen signicant growth
worldwide in recent years (REN21 2011). This technology allows heat within
buildings that has been generated by the suns rays to rise through vents
into the attic where it is subsequently expelled through an opening in the
roof. Provided that a building using this technology is tightly enough sealed
against air leaks, the escaping heat generates a slight vacuum that is lled
by air that has been cooled by passing through pipes buried in the ground
prior to entering the building through oor vents.
Thermal energy storage allows waste heat, or heat generated from off-
peak electricity generation, to be stored for signicant periods until demand
for it arises. It can thus be used to signicantly increase the efciency of a
district heating or cooling network while simultaneously reducing capacity
requirements, as well as the costs associated with building additional
capacity (WEF 2011h).
Real-World, Large-Scale Application of
Decentralized Energy Technology
Londons decentralized energy and district heating development program
provides an excellent example of simultaneous application of a number
of energy-efcient technologies that is replicable in virtually all cities,
regardless of the income level of the country in which they are located.
Following development of a public knowledge base relating to
district heating, the city implemented a number of policy measures. The
initiatives of varying scales that were undertaken as a result of these policy
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 167
measures were nanced from external funding sources to ensure their
ongoing nancial support.
In 2007, the Mayor of London set the ambitious target of procuring
one-fourth of Greater Londons energy from decentralized sources by 2025,
which is equivalent to more than 10 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year
(DECC 2011).
To ensure that this goal was achieved, the Decentralised Energy Master
Planning (DEMaP) program was introduced by the London Development
Agency (LDA) in 2009. The LDA allocated nearly $8 million to support
decentralized energy over 4 years beginning 2009. These funds were used
to build capacity, catalyze decentralized energy development, and nance
CHP plants that fueled district heating networks in London.
The DEMaP program enabled boroughs to identify decentralized energy
opportunities, and to develop the capacity to exploit those opportunities.
Comprising three energy strategy phases that included initial capacity
building, preparation of feasibility studies, and project delivery, the DEMaP
program dened an entire trajectory of work packages. This required
generating a signicant amount of information regarding Londons heat loads
to ensure that the citys overall capacity would, in the end, be sufcient to
meet its heating requirements
Ultimately, this information was presented in the form of the London
Heat Map, which provided baseline information concerning public,
commercial, and domestic fuel consumption in London. Made accessible to
the public online, this map allowed users to zoom in to street level to quickly
identify concentrations of heat demand where the installation of district
heating facilities would likely be appropriate. Initially intended as a tool
for policy and decision makers, the London Heat Map helped the general
public identify opportunities for employing decentralized energy in particular
neighborhoods. This assisted the development of new decentralized energy
initiatives by enabling market participants to make informed investment
decisions at almost zero cost.
Development of new decentralized energy initiatives was further
supported by publishing a free tool kit, known as the Decentralized Energy
Networks Masterplanning Guidance (DENet), which allowed local authorities
and other stakeholders to quickly carry out pre-feasibility assessment of
potential district heating schemes. This likewise had the benecial impact of
further reducing uncertainty and investor risk (Arup 2012).
Further to the DEMaP program, in late-2011, the Greater London
Authority initiated the Decentralized Energy for London program, which
168 Green Cities
supported delivery of more decentralized energy schemes (GLA 2012). The
Decentralized Energy for London program was funded by 3.3m, 90% of
which was secured from the European Local Energy Assistance (ELENA)
facility of the European Investment Bank. This program provided project
sponsorsparticularly London boroughswith technical, nancial, and
commercial assistance in developing and bringing decentralized energy
projects to market.
London has been home to district heating networks for a number of
years, with active schemes in Barkantine, the City of London, Pimlico,
and Whitehall, and more to be implemented in the near future. Growth in
interconnections between some of these existing schemes is anticipated,
along with potential development of a number of high-capacity networks
that will transport industrial volumes of heat from power stations to users
over long distances, thus allowing signicant carbon savings to be achieved.
Both existing and planned initiatives of this type can be viewed in greater
detail in the London Heat Maps vision layer.
3
Londons pursuit of decentralized energy and district heating
independently of national targets is an excellent example of the low-carbon
achievements possible at a city scale, and the use of innovative nancing
and support mechanisms for implementing such initiatives. Indeed, many
of the initiatives implemented in London have now been taken up at the
national level, with the introduction of the National Heat Map for England
and Wales, as well as the push for national development of heat networks in
other United Kingdom cities (DECC 2012).
Conclusion
Despite the fact that cities have traditionally had limited power over energy-
related issues, they nevertheless hold the promise of slowing or halting
climate change. Innovative strategies and initiatives based on sound
knowledge and thorough analysis of the experience of model cities around
the world are ultimately the key to a low-carbon future.
While vital to human comfort, energy use is at present intrinsically linked
to climate change, which ultimately makes it a threat to continued prosperity.
Through improved living standards, cities are signicant users of energy
and are therefore primary contributors to climate change. The implication
of the rapid rates of urbanization that are forecast for the worlds cities is
that unless energy consumption is decoupled from economic advance, the
3
www.londonheatmap.org.uk
Energy Strategy for Green Cities 169
climate-change impacts that result from the energy consumption that fuels
it could have catastrophic consequences that, in the end, might threaten
economic advance itself.
Though some of the examples used in this chapter have their roots in
high-income countries, most are transferable elsewhere, especially to the
cities of Asia and the Pacic. In fact, research shows that Asias energy
strategy potential will increase rapidly in coming decades. This will in all
likelihood be driven by rapid uptake of renewable energy technologies and
policies that lead to a low-carbon future.
The threat of climate change is too great for nations and cities to work
in isolation, particularly in light of current information technology that allows
technology transfer on an unprecedented scale. The nascent cities of
developing regions have a unique opportunity to benet from the knowledge
gained and lessons learned elsewhere. This places them in an excellent
position to leapfrog over obsolete technologies and inefcient practices,
and thus to become world leaders in securing long-term environmental
sustainability for the entire planet.
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175
Figure 4.1
CHAPTER 4
Transport for Green Cities
by Lloyd Wright
Introduction
Movement enables development. To undertake commercial exchange,
access public services, or engage in recreation and entertainment, society
relies on the ability to move persons, goods, or information from one location
to another. The concepts of exchange and movement can be viewed as core
elements in dening a city:
Cities are an invention to maximize exchange opportunities and to
minimize travel. These exchanges may be exchanges of goods, friendship,
knowledge, culture, work, education or emotional and spiritual support
Cities are a deliberate concentration of these exchange opportunities
in order to increase both the diversity and accessibility of exchange
opportunities The role of transport is to help maximize exchange
(Engwicht 1999, 19).
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Nanjing Road.
176 Green Cities
Thus, mobility and accessibility are intertwined with development.
And yet, paradoxically, transport conditions tend to worsen as eco-
nomic development increases:
While sanitation, health, education, and employment tend to improve
through economic development, transport problems tend to worsen
(Pealosa 2003).
Transport is the only major sector in which base conditions tend to
worsen as economic performance increases. As incomes rise, so do levels
of car and motorcycle ownership, which leads to heightened levels of
congestion and other problems associated with motorization. In the cities
of the developing world, increased private motorization tends to decrease
exchange and accessibility.
Developing-nation cities, though, are in a unique position to shape their
form before a culture of motorization becomes fully established. Convincing
individuals to leave their cars and motorcycles for alternatives is far more
difcult and costly than retaining current users of sustainable transport
options through improvements in quality. Instilling smart growth design
principles into city expansion, maintaining public transport, and retaining
nonmotorized users through service quality are proactive measures that
are perishable in some ways if the opportunity is missed. Since major
investments in road-based infrastructure are relatively irreversible over the
medium term, decisions made by developing-nation ofcials today will likely
determine the shape and direction of the future urban form.
Technological leapfrogging refers to a process by which developing
countries can bypass intermediate development steps and progress directly
to more advanced technological options. With regard to urban transport, this
process implies a move directly to more sustainable transport options rather
than committing to a predominantly car-based urban form. The evolutionary
path ahead for developing-nation cities may be akin to a sort of hierarchy
of needs for urban mobility. Historically, this evolutionary perspective has
assumed that quality-of-life considerations will only be addressed after
severe problems force change. Figure 4.2 outlines this process.
Implicit in the notion of Green Cities for developing nations is the idea
that development and motorization can be decoupled. Sustainable transport
options offer an alternative path for Green Cities. A complementary package
of public transport, quality footpaths and cycleways, vehicle-restriction
measures, clean fuels, safety programs, and high standards can constitute
a new paradigm for urban mobility and access.
Transport for Green Cities 177
Urban Transport Trends and Conditions
Since the rst Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, understanding of
the relationship between urban sustainability and the transport sector has
improved signicantly. Moreover, renowned examples of quality sustainable
transport now exist in several locales, such as Amsterdam (Netherlands),
Bogot (Colombia), Brisbane (Australia), Copenhagen (Denmark), Curitiba
(Brazil), Guangzhou (Peoples Republic of China [PRC]), Portland (United
States), and Seoul (Republic of Korea).
Despite these gains in understanding and in delivering a few quality
examples, the overall trends are toward greater private motorization, along
with increased congestion, accidents, fuel consumption, and pollutant levels.
Transport may well be the weak link in terms of a broader realization
of Green Cities. Cities may make signicant strides in energy and water
resource efciency, waste management, green buildings, and even urban
agriculture, but without land use planning and investment commitments to
Figure 4.2 Hierarchy of urban transport through an evolutionary process
Quality of life
stage (effective
public transport,
walking and cycling,
improved land-use
planning, auto
restrictions)
Full motorisation stage
(private vehicles and limited
public transport)
Early motorisation stage (two-
wheelers, used four-wheelers)
Paratransit dominant stage (vans provide most of
public transport, only wealthy with private vehicles)
Basic access stage (captive non-motorised market)
Leapfrogging
Quality of life
stage (effective
public transport,
walking and cycling,
improved land-use
planning, auto
restrictions)
Full motorisation stage
(private vehicles and limited
public transport)
Early motorisation stage (two-
wheelers, used four-wheelers)
Paratransit dominant stage (vans provide most of
public transport, only wealthy with private vehicles)
Basic access stage (captive non-motorised market)
Quality-of-life
stage (effective
public transport,
walking and cycling,
improved land-use
planning, auto
restrictions)
Full motorization stage
(private vehicles and limited
public transport)
Early motorization stage (two-
wheelers, used four-wheelers)
Paratransit dominant stage (vans provide most of
public transport, only wealthy with private vehicles)
Basic access stage (captive nonmotorized market)
Leapfrogging
Source: Wright (2005).
178 Green Cities
2,500
2,000
1,500
2,000
2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2046 2050
500
0
Asia and the Pacifc
Latin America
Africa
Middle East
Eastern Europe
OECD-Europe
OECD-Pacifc
OECD-North America
sustainable access and mobility, congestion, pollution, and accident levels
will undermine competitiveness in terms of livability.
Growth in Private Motorization
Urbanization and private motorization are inextricably linked. As the worlds
population has become more urban, the global eet of cars and motorcycles
has followed in numbers. The worlds urban areas will increase by 2.8 billion
between 2010 and 2050 (UNDESA 2011). Of this, 96% will be living in low-
and middle-income countries (ADB and World Bank 2012). At that point,
the worlds urban population will total 4 billion. The PRC alone is currently
absorbing approximately 13 million rural residents every year into cities
(Baeumler, Ijjasz-Vasquez, and Mehndiratta 2012).
The planet is currently home to approximately 1.2 billion vehicles,
including light-duty cars and motorcycles, freight vehicles, and public-
transport vehicles. This gure is projected to climb to 3.1 billion vehicles by
2050 (IEA 2011a).
The growth in motorized vehicle ownership has largely followed trends in
per capita income, which is also associated with growing levels of urbanization.
Dargay and Gately (1999) show that in the per capita income range of $2,000
OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Source: IEA (2011a).
Figure 4.3 Projected size of global passenger vehicle eet by region
(in millions of light-duty vehicles)
Transport for Green Cities 179
Figure 4.4 The many negative impacts of unsustainable transport
$5,000, vehicle purchases jump sharply. Several major developing nations are
now entering this development zone of rapid motorization.
Impacts of Motorization
The impacts of dependence on private motorized transport are quite evident
in much of the world today, especially in the rapidly growing economies
of the developing world. These impacts of the growing use of cars and
motorcycles appear in the economic, environmental, and social dimensions
of urban life (Figure 4.4).
Source: Wright (2005).
Air quality
Vehicle emissions harm
human health and the
natural environment
Noise and vibration
Noise affects productivity
and health
Accidents
Each year 1.2 million lives
are lost due to vehicle
accidents
Global climate change
Vehicles are responsible for
roughly 25% of fossil-based
CO
2
emissions
Natural habitats
Roadways disrupt habitats
and open areas to
eploitation
Waste disposal
The disposal of vehicles and
vehicle parts contributes to
landfill problems
Congestion
Time lost in congestion
affects overall productivity
Energy security
Dependence on petrol-based
mobility affects national
security
Economic efficiency
Financial capital consumed
by car expenditures reduces
capital for other investments
Severance
Roadways sever communities
and inhibit social interactions
Visual intrusion
Cars, roads, and parking
areas are all detraction from
a citys beauty
Loss of living space
Roads and parking lots
consume large amounts of
urban space
180 Green Cities
The smooth and timely movement of goods and people is a signicant
determinant of productivity and overall economic efciency. The cumulative
nancial impact of trafc delays can be staggering. In 2010, trafc congestion
costs in the United States totaled an estimated $101 billion, principally in
the form of passenger time and wasted fuel (Schrank, Lomas, and Eisele
2011). Bangkoks notoriously congested roadways are estimated to result
in delays and inefciencies totaling the equivalent of 6% of Thailands gross
domestic product (Willoughby 2000). Congestion also tends to exacerbate
other negative impacts of private-vehicle use, such as the quantity of air
pollutants (Figure 4.5).
Despite more than 100 years of technological renement, emissions
from a vehicles tailpipe remain a serious health concern. Air pollutants
from transport are linked to a long list of serious ailments, most notably,
respiratory illnesses and cardiovascular disease. Epidemiological studies
have directly linked transport-related contaminants to asthma, bronchitis,
heart attacks, and strokes (Dockery and Pope 1994). Respiratory ailments
Figure 4.5
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Trends in congestion, pollutant levels, and road accidents are all intensifying, especially in
developing nations
Transport for Green Cities 181
and other diseases due to vehicle-related air pollution lead to 500,000
premature deaths each year, reducing global economic output by an
estimated 2%4%. In addition to premature mortality, there are also other
economic costs of private-vehicle use that result from pollutant-induced
illness. Hospital admissions, lost workdays, discomfort, and stress are just
a few of these impacts.
Global attention is increasingly xed on the tremendous human and
material losses incurred from road accidents. The decade from 2011 to
2020 has been proclaimed the United Nations Decade of Action for Road
Safety with focus on safety investments and interventions from national
and international organizations. Road accidents result in nearly 1.3 million
fatalities and approximately 50 million injuries and disabilities each year. Low-
and middle-income developing countries account for 90% of road deaths,
although these countries only account for 50% of the worlds motorized
vehicle eet (WHO 2004). By 2020, road crash fatalities are projected to
increase by 80%. Globally, road accidents will become the fth leading
cause of death in all age groups by 2030 (WHO 2009).
Noise is also a growing concern from both the perspective of health and
economic productivity. Noise from vehicle operation, horns, and car alarms
can all bring negative health consequences. The World Health Organization
(2012) has documented the most common problems associated with
sustained and/or excessive noise levels. These include pain and hearing
fatigue, hearing impairment such as tinnitus, impacts on social behavior,
sleep disturbance, cardiovascular effects, and immune system impairment.
Sustained exposure to noise has been associated with delays in cognitive
development and reduced classroom performance on the part of children
(Evans and Maxwell 1997).
As noted above, while transports impact on the local environment
in terms of congestion, pollutants, and road fatalities is directly affecting
development, the sectors most profound impacts may be those at the
regional and global levels. Increasingly, transport has become a principal
obstacle to achieving progress in areas such as energy security and global
climate change.
Transport represents the fastest-growing source of greenhouse gas
emissions. In 2009, transport was responsible for 23% of global carbon
dioxide emissions from fossil-fuel-based sources, while the energy sector
accounted for 41% of these emissions (IEA 2011b). However, by 2035,
transport is expected to become the single largest greenhouse gas emitter,
accounting for 46% of global greenhouse gas emissions (Clarke and Calvin
2008). Transports relative rise as a leading emitter of greenhouse gases
stems from the sectors reliance on oil as its principal fuel.
182 Green Cities
Transports focus on oil as a principal fuel has meant that national
energy security issues are also most closely associated with the sector. Oil-
consuming nations that rely signicantly on imported fuels are at risk in terms
of consumer price increases, balance-of-payment impacts, and national
budget shortfalls. The growth of motorization in countries such as India and
the PRC has placed strains on regional and global energy security. Asia and
the Pacic produces only 9% of the global supply of oil, but accounts for
26% of all oil consumed (IEA 2006). The regions oil-importing countries are
particularly vulnerable to rapid changes in energy and fuel supplies, volatility
of global fuel prices, and imbalances in the supply and demand for oil.
Transport Conditions in Developing-Nation Cities
The sharp growth in private motorization levels has not translated into
improved mobility for much of the world. As noted above, increases in
congestion, road accidents, and pollutants have meant that increasing
investments in private motorized mobility are meeting with diminishing
returns in terms of travel times and comfort.
While trends indicate continued growth in private motorized vehicle
ownership, this implies another type of trend for nonmotorized options
(walking and bicycling) and public transport. These modes are being
discarded as soon as persons have the economic capacity to switch to
motorcycles and cars. This exodus is to an extent tied to the increasing
unsafe, insecure, and uncomfortable nature of streets and services.
Despite its economic importance to the poor, both as a mode of
transport and a source of income, and its environmental advantages,
the potential of non-motorized transport is often unmobilized or even
positively suppressed As a consequence, non-motorized transport
becomes less safe, less convenient, and less attractive, making the
forecast decline of non-motorized transport a self-fullling prophesy
(World Bank 2001, 131).
If pedestrian infrastructure is of poor quality, then motorization can be
the mode of choice even for very short distances. Pedestrians are typically
faced with the following challenges:
Complete lack of pedestrian pavements
Poor quality of pavements, often of dirt or mud
No physical separation from high levels of trafc and from high-speed
trafc
Extreme levels of noise and air pollution
Transport for Green Cities 183
Lack of infrastructure for crossing streets
Obstructed pavements due to illegal (or legal) car parking, poor design,
or uncollected rubbish
No protection from harsh climatic conditions
Lack of pedestrian-support infrastructure such as street lighting
Pedestrian overcrowding due to narrow or below-capacity pavements
High levels of robbery, assault, and other types of crime befalling
pedestrians
Adapted from Vasconcellos (2001, 113) and Hass-Klau et al. (1999, 105)
The lack of formal pedestrian pavements in developing nations is relatively
common. Hook (2003, 12) notes: Over 60% of the roads in Jakarta, for
example, have no sidewalks, and those that exist are heavily obstructed
by telephone poles, trees, construction materials, trash, and open sewer
and drainage ditches. Crossing a street can be particularly difcult in low-
income cities with a lack of formal crossings. In some instances, pedestrian
Figure 4.6
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The lack of adequate pedestrian facilities discourages walking as a viable option in many
developing-nation cities
184 Green Cities
overpasses or underpasses are provided, but pedestrians often eschew
such infrastructure due to reasons of safety and convenience (Figure 4.7).
Pedestrian overpasses and underpasses in developing-nation cities are
often either lled with informal merchants, or are inherently dangerous from
a crime and safety standpoint. Darkened underpasses put pedestrians at
particular risk to criminal elements. Not surprisingly, many developing-nation
residents choose to take their chances crossing through the chaotic and
dangerous maze of trafc. Vasconcellos (2001, 114) also notes that even
when crossings are provided, they rarely give priority to the pedestrian:
Crossing facilities are also inadequate. Zebra crossings are rare, and
signals rarely consider pedestrian needs. In such cases, pedestrians are
seen as something that might be stacked until some gap is available
in the trafc stream: second-class citizens have to wait until rst-class
ones exert their rights to use roads.
The poor pedestrian conditions in developing-nation cities can result in
pedestrian trip distances that are considerably longer than those endured
by motorized vehicles. Hook (2003) documents how sidewalk barriers and
other detours in Surabaya (Indonesia) result in substantially longer journeys
for pedestrians:
pedestrian barricades and one-way streets have been used to
facilitate long-distance motorized trips, but which simultaneously
impose huge detours for short distance cycling and pedestrian trips.
People wishing to cross a main shopping street often nd it easier to
take a taxi two kilometers than to walk across the street. In Surabaya,
the World Bank estimated that these measures generate an additional
daily 7,000 kilometers of needless vehicle trafc.
Likewise, public transport is undergoing a continual loss of mode-share
across developing-nation cities (Wright and Hook 2007). The following are
among the contributing causes of this trend:
Inconvenience in terms of location of stations and frequency of service
Failure to service key origins and destinations
Fear of crime at stations and within buses
Lack of safety in terms of driver ability and the road worthiness of buses
Service is much slower than private vehicles, especially when buses
make frequent stops
Overloading of vehicles makes riding uncomfortable
Transport for Green Cities 185
Figure 4.7
Public transport can be relatively expensive for some developing-nation
households
Poor-quality or nonexistent infrastructure (e.g., lack of shelters, unclean
vehicles)
Lack of an organized system structure and accompanying maps and
information make the system difcult to understand
Low status of public transit services
In many cases, collective transport services are provided principally
by informal or paratransit operators, who are often given little investment
support to deliver quality and safe services (Figures 4.8ad).
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Informal and dangerous roadway crossing in Dhaka, Bangladesh
186 Green Cities
Figures 4.8ad
Sustainable Urban Transport
The concept of sustainable transport encompasses modes, practices, and
policies that maximize the economic, environmental, and social benets of
access and mobility while minimizing negative externalities. In recent years,
a framework for sustainable urban transport has emerged under the name
AvoidShiftImprove. This framework highlights several dimensions of
sustainable options while also indicating an order of priority for achieving
improved transport services.
Avoid Strategies
Avoid refers to interventions that eliminate unnecessary trips or introduce
travel substitutes that replace the need for physical movement. Avoiding
or reducing travel needs is the rst priority in a package of sustainable
transport interventions, as avoid strategies produce the most complete
sustainability benets. Among the interventions that avoid or reduce
Collective transport services as operated in (clockwise from upper left): Nairobi (Kenya), Surabaya
(Indonesia), Manila (Philippines), and Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic)
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Transport for Green Cities 187
travel are improved urban design and use of information and communication
technologies (ICTs).
Table 4.1 summarizes many of the types of avoid strategies, which
typically fall into the categories of land-use measures and ICTs.
Recently, particular attention has been paid to the role that transit-
oriented development (TOD) can play in both promoting sustainable urban
form as well as providing a nancing mechanism for implementation. TOD
involves a package of measures that both eliminate trips and reduce trip
length. A cornerstone of any TOD project is the development of commercial
and residential property investment around public transport stations
(Figure 4.9). Investment from TOD initiatives can be used to nance the
public transport system itself.
Telemobility encompasses activities that use ICT as an alternative to
physical travel. Some of the potential applications of telemobility include
telecommuting, telework, teleconferencing, teleshopping, and telemedicine.
Figure 4.9
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High-rise development along Bangkoks SkyTrain corridor
188 Green Cities
Table 4.1 Avoid strategies for achieving sustainable transport
Measure
A. Land-Use Measures
1. Integration of land use and
transport
Integrated land use-transport planning
Land use-transport institutional
integration
2. Smart growth Transit-oriented development zoning
regulations
Mixed development policies and
incentives
Densication policies and incentives
Eco-blocks
Developer incentives
Land-benet levies
Location-efcient mortgages
Development of greenbelts and urban
boundaries
Inner-city regeneration policies and
programs
B. ICT Measures
1. Information and communication
technology
Internet bandwidth improvements
Internet accessibility improvements
Mobile-telephone market penetration
Video-teleconferencing/Telepresence
Telecommuting
Telework
Teleshopping
Source: Wright (2012).
Telemobility uses technologies such as telephone, email, and video
teleconferencing to reduce transport needs. Telecommuters may still
physically travel to their work headquarters on an occasional basis for face-
to-face contact with colleagues, but in general, ICT is used to replace the
daily work commute.
Shift Strategies
Shift refers to interventions that encourage market share to transfer to
more environmentally and socially sustainable modes. In the context of
developing-nation cities, the idea of shift may be more appropriately
termed maintain, as most such cities are attempting to maintain their
current relatively high share of sustainable transport modes despite ongoing
market-share gains by cars and motorcycles. The transport modes typically
Transport for Green Cities 189
targeted by shift strategies include public transport and nonmotorized
transport. Table 4.2 summarizes many of the types of shift strategies
available to policy makers.
Public transport
Public transport systems can provide mobility for travel distances within an
urban area. To succeed, though, public transport must be designed to be
car-competitive. The following key customer-oriented features can make a
public transport system car-competitive:
Existence of an integrated network of routes and corridors
Enhanced stations that are convenient, comfortable, secure, and
weather-protected
Stations that provide level access between the loading platform and
vehicle oor
Special stations and terminals that facilitate easy physical integration
between trunk routes, feeder services, and other mass transit systems
Preboard fare collection and fare verication systems
Distinctive marketing identity for the overall system
There are many types of public transport technologies, including road-
based and rail-based options. However, each type of technology is appropriate
to particular technical and nancial circumstances. The emergence of bus
rapid transit (BRT) as a cost-effective solution to achieving a quality public
transport system has particularly catalyzed new system development
(Figure 4.10). BRT is a high-quality, bus-based transit system that delivers
fast, comfortable, and cost-effective urban mobility through the provision
of segregated right-of-way infrastructure, rapid and frequent operations,
and excellence in marketing and customer service (Wright and Hook 2007).
BRT essentially emulates the performance and amenity characteristics of a
modern rail-based transit system, but at a fraction of the cost.
The BRT concept originated in a few innovative cities such as Curitiba,
Brazil during the 1970s. Curitiba sought to achieve rail-like quality for
public transport within a limited budget. Subsequently, BRT systems have
now been developed in approximately 140 cities worldwide, with notable
systems in Ahmedabad (India), Bogot (Colombia), Brisbane (Australia),
Cape Town (South Africa), Guangzhou (PRC), Las Vegas (United States),
Nantes (France), and So Paulo (Brazil).
190 Green Cities
Nonmotorized Transport
To make public transport successful, though, integration with nonmotorized
access is essential. In short, customers must be able to reach public
transport stations safely, securely, and comfortably.
Nonmotorized transport (NMT) modes such as walking and cycling are
the most basic and economic of mobility options. Yet at the same time,
these modes are often the most ignored in terms of quality and investment.
Simple, cost-effective investments in pedestrian infrastructure can make a
substantial improvement in usage levels. The following menu of upgrades
can achieve this:
Repairing of surfaces and use of improved paving tiles
Lighting
Security cameras and presence of security personnel
Amenity features such as street furniture, artwork, and public toilets
Figure 4.10
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The City of Curitiba (Brazil) pioneered the bus rapid transit concept in the mid-1970s
Transport for Green Cities 191
Safe, signal-controlled crossings
Covered walkways
Direct routings for pedestrians
Way-nding signage and information
Fully pedestrianized streets and city zones are an effective means not
only of encouraging more walking but also of stimulating local economic
development. Car-free shopping streets and historical centers are common
in most major cities in Europe, as well as in many cities in Asia and Latin
America. Kaungerstrae in Munich (Germany) and Nanjing Road in Shanghai
(PRC) are host to the worlds highest pedestrian volumes. Copenhagens
(Denmark) development of pedestrianized areas began in 1962 and has
continued to grow (Figure 4.11). During a typical summers day, more than
260,000 pedestrians take to these areas (Gemzoe 2001). Other major car-
free zones in Europe include the Baixa area in Lisbon (Portugal), Las Ramblas
in Barcelona (Spain), the St. Germain area of Paris (France), and the central
areas of Brugges (Belgium), Ghent (Belgium), Nrnberg (Germany), Obidos
(Portugal), and Siena (Italy).
Car-free zones are also typical in many parts of the developing world.
City centers in North Africa, Asia, and Latin America often quite naturally
become car-free areas due to the narrow streets and human-scale form of
such centers. Cities such as Buenos Aires (Argentina), Cartagena (Colombia),
Curitiba (Brazil), Old Delhi (India), Quito (Ecuador), So Paulo (Brazil), and
Shanghai (PRC) have permanent car-free areas.
Figure 4.11
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Pedestrianized area in Copenhagen, Denmark
192 Green Cities
A relatively recent phenomenon is that of greenways, which are
extended pedestrianized corridors that have often replaced former
motorized-dominated landscapes with greenery and other public amenities
(Figure 4.12). Greenways serve a multitude of purposes including mobility
between key inner-city destinations, such as shopping and recreation areas.
Both Seoul (Republic of Korea) and Guangzhou (PRC) have reclaimed
former waterways that were previously entombed under urban highways.
The razing of elevated motorways to make way for more human forms of
transport is an interesting trend that has also taken place in North America
and Europe. The greenways in Seoul and Guangzhou have now become
iconic tourist destinations for these cities.
In many instances, pedestrian and greenway areas often also permit
NMT vehicle access. NMT vehicles encompass a wide range of vehicle
types including bicycles, nonmotorized tricycles, pedicabs, carts, and other
human-powered vehicles. NMT vehicles are often critical in extending the
effective range of the urban poor who are unable to afford private motorized
transport or even public transport. NMT vehicles can increase the viable
distance traveled by ve times or more as compared to walking. Such
vehicles can also constitute a key feeder service that links origins and
destinations with public transport.
NMT vehicles are also a source of economic development in their own
right, as these vehicles are often used for vending products and providing
delivery services. Thus, bicycles are both a fuel security measure as well as
a component of a strategy for achieving local economic development.
Figure 4.12
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Greenway corridor in Guangzhou, Peoples Republic of China
Transport for Green Cities 193
Figure 4.13
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Other signicant trends in NMT vehicle use include the growing
popularity of bicycle-sharing systems and the development of modern
pedicab services. Bicycle-sharing programs permit casual users to rent a
bicycle at an affordable cost from rental stations around the city (Figure 4.13).
Such programs thus extend the use of bicycles to those who choose to not
personally invest in a bicycle. In 2005, implementation of the Paris Veleb
bicycle-sharing system heralded a period of signicant worldwide growth in
such systems. Between 2005 and 2010, approximately 240 bicycle-sharing
systems were established. The worlds largest system operates in Hangzhou
(PRC) with over 50,000 bicycles. Fourth-generation bicycle-sharing
systems now employ modular stations that utilize smart-card access.
Modern pedicabs hold the potential to improve the technical efciency
of the historical cycle-rickshaw, which is an important mobility option for
short- to medium-trip distances. With the use of lightweight berglass
bodies, recumbent driver positioning, and fully weather protected customer
enclosures, modern pedicabs are increasingly positioned to become a high-
quality mobility option (Figure 4.14). Optional electric-assist technologies
also permit pedicab use in cities with hills and/or hot weather conditions.
In many instances, pedicabs are incorporated into quality public transport
systems as feeder services.
Bicycle-sharing system in Nantes (France)
194 Green Cities
Transportation demand management
To incentivize users toward shifting to public transport and NMT,
transportation demand management (TDM) can be an effective set of
tools within shift strategies. TDM also functions as an avoid strategy
by incentivizing alternatives to physical travel. TDM encompasses nancial
incentive schemes that discourage the use of private motorized vehicles,
especially during peak periods.
The most renowned forms of TDM include congestion charging
schemes that place a price on urban roadway usage. In 1975, Singapore rst
implemented the Area Licensing Scheme, which was a manually controlled
road-pricing scheme. The scheme required motorists to pay for entry into a
central Restricted Zone.
Technological advances enabled the city to implement an Electronic
Road Pricing (ERP) scheme in 1998. This system utilizes short-range radio
signals between in-vehicle electronic units and overhead gantries. The
gantries are both on major avenues entering the central district and along
certain highways. As such, charges are applied not only to the central district
but also to congested highways. As of 2010, the Singapore system annually
generated approximately $46 million in revenues with operating costs of
Figure 4.14
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Modern pedicab technologies offer the potential to revitalize this form of transport
Transport for Green Cities 195
$9 million. The ERP scheme is credited with reducing trafc levels by 50%
and increasing average trafc speeds from around 18 kilometers per hour to
30 kilometers per hour.
Subsequent to Singapores ERP, congestion pricing schemes have been
implemented in three Norwegian cities (Bergen, Oslo, and Trondheim), as
well as in London and Stockholm.
Table 4.2 Shift strategies for achieving sustainable transport
Measure
A. Public Transport
1. Urban road-based Bus rapid transit (BRT) lite
Full BRT
Paratransit upgrades
Scholar services
2. Urban rail-based Street trams
At-grade light rail transit (LRT)
Elevated LRT
Personal rapid transit
Underground heavy rail
(metro)
Elevated heavy rail
Light monorail
Heavy monorail
3. Fare systems Integrated fare systems
Free public transport
4. Inter-city travel Improved long-distance bus
services
Improved standard inter-city
rail services
High-speed inter-city rail
B. Nonmotorized Transport
1. Pedestrian initiatives Pedestrian network
development
Pedestrian facility upgrades
(surface, lighting)
Car-free days
Pedestrianization
2. Nonmotorized vehicles Cycle-way development
Bicycle parking facilities
continued on next page
196 Green Cities
Measure
Bicycle-sharing initiatives
Pedicab initiatives
E-bikes
C. Transportation Demand Management
1. Pricing mechanisms Congestion pricing
Road tolls
Parking fees
Parking levies
Fuel levies
Removal or reduction of fuel
subsidies
Vehicle duties or levies
2. Regulation Reduction in the number of
parking spaces
Vehicle ownership restrictions
Pay-as-you-go auto
insurance
Restrictions on importation of
used vehicles
D. Freight Transport
1. Freight transport Pricing incentives for road-to-
rail shifts
Provision of rail freight
infrastructure
Source: Wright (2012).
Improve Strategies
Improve refers to interventions that increase the operational efciency
of vehicles. These types of interventions include propulsion technologies
and fuels that enhance efciency and produce fewer pollutants. Improve
interventions can also include standards and policies such as fuel-efciency
standards and fuel-emission standards.
While transport represents a sizeable portion of national energy use and
thus represents one of the largest and fastest-growing sources of greenhouse
gas emissions, the sector is often ignored in terms of possibilities for
mitigating energy consumption. This lack of attention to transport energy use
occurs due to the difculty of substituting other fuels for oil. Whereas power
Table 4.2 continued
Transport for Green Cities 197
generation enjoys a relative plethora of options (coal, hydro, natural gas,
nuclear, solar, wind, energy efciency), over 90% of transport is singularly
dependent on oil.
Nevertheless, a combination of rising and volatile oil prices and new
technological innovations has meant that there are increasingly viable
alternatives to oil as a base transport fuel. Both hybrid-electric and plug-in
electric vehicles are now commercially available. In the PRC, the government
is providing incentives for increasing the market share of electric vehicles.
Smaller vehicle types, such as two-wheelers and three-wheelers, are
particularly suited to electric-drive systems, given lighter vehicle weights
that are compatible with todays battery technologies (Figure 4.15). Lithium-
ion batteries have helped to transform the electric vehicle market by offering
high-energy densities, quick recharging times, and lightweight performance.
One obstacle to widespread application of new fuel technologies is the
supporting refueling infrastructure required. The size and cost of retrotting
fuel stations is a daunting prospect that will likely stie any proposed fuel
transformation, even if other technological and cost barriers are overcome.
However, large eets offer an opportunity for building up the scale of
alternative technologies without the need for a mass transformation of refueling
infrastructure. Large eets typically employ centralized refueling depots, which
imply only a relatively modest required investment in new refueling infrastructure.
Since large eets such as public transport vehicles and metered taxi vehicles
are collective transport options, the implementation of alternative technologies
in these cases coincides with the green transport agenda.
For this reason, eet conversions to natural gas, biomethane, and hybrid
technology are occurring at an accelerated rate (Figure 4.16). Compressed
Figure 4.15
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The Asian Development Bank has supported the trialing and implementation of electric three-
wheelers in the Philippines
198 Green Cities
natural gas conversions to eets in Delhi (India) and Dhaka (Bangladesh)
during the past decade led to signicant and immediate improvements in
air quality. Between 2000 and 2003, Delhi (India) imposed a conversion
to compressed natural gas for buses and auto rickshaws (i.e. motorized
three-wheelers). The result was an immediate and signicant reduction in air
pollutants, including ambient reductions of 75% in carbon monoxide levels,
7% in particulate matter, and a 35% in sulfur oxides (Narain and Krupnick
2007). Compressed natural gas eet applications in countries such as the
Republic of Korea have also done much to improve national energy security.
Alternative fuels, though, can also bring unintended consequences that
undermine their overall impact on sustainability. Biofuels were once hailed
as a green energy solution for transport that also offered income benets
to farmers. However, the use of biofuels, both in the form of biodiesel and
ethanol, has led to controversy regarding their impact on food prices. In
addition to issues such as food versus fuel uses of agricultural products,
biofuels have, in some cases, led to loss of key habitats through the
replacement of biodiverse areas with monoculture plantations. Nevertheless,
more sustainable forms of biofuel remain a major alternative fuel option.
Figure 4.16
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Compressed natural gas vehicles are prevalent in the Seoul (Republic of Korea)
public transport system
Transport for Green Cities 199
Fuel and technology advancements can be encouraged through the
implementation of fuel-economy standards, as well as fuel quality standards.
Fuel-economy standards set minimum efciency targets for new vehicles.
Highly progressive standards have been established in the PRC, along with
signicant nancial incentives for encouraging the use of electric vehicles.
Table 4.3 Improve strategies for achieving sustainable transport
Measure Initial Priority for Pilot Study
A. Intelligent Transportation Systems
1. System management and
control
Public transport management systems
Freight management systems
Roadway incident management
Trafc signal control and management
B. Fuel and Vehicle Technology
1. Fuel switching and propulsion
systems
Synthetic fuels
Natural gas
Biofuels (biodiesel, ethanol)
Hydrogen fuel cells
Hybrid-electric
Electric
2. Vehicle design Lightweight materials
Aerodynamics
System design for universal access
C. Regulation
1. Standards Fuel-economy standards
Fuel-quality standards
Tailpipe-emission standards
Vehicle-noise standards
Vehicle licensing and registration
Auto-insurance requirements
Driver licensing standards
2. Testing Vehicle-emissions testing
Vehicle-safety testing
Driver-license testing
continued on next page
200 Green Cities
3. Enforcement Trafc law and parking enforcement
Vehicle-licensing enforcement
Auto-insurance enforcement
D. Programs
1. Vehicle and driving
improvement
Eco-driving programs
Vehicle-maintenance programs
Programs for scrapping older vehicles
2. Scheduling Alternative work schedules
Alternative school schedules
Flextime
Source: Wright (2012).
Green Cities and Transport
The growing emergence of Eco-City and Green City projects around
the world demonstrates the new awareness being given to the fundamental
sustainability of cities. These examples set the stage for wider replication of
sustainable urban forms.
Perhaps the most encouraging aspect of the Green City movement is
that many of these projects are market-driven. The demand for safe, secure,
and clean communities gives added value to Green City designs. As families
seek neighborhoods that are free from the risks of vehicle accidents and air
contaminants, a market-driven housing can stimulate further development
of these types of urban forms.
Spectrum of Transport Options Available to Green Cities
The transport systems employed in recent Green City demonstrations include
a spectrum of possibilities, from relatively car-lite cities to fully car-free
areas. In general, a Green City will include some form of motorized vehicle
restrictions along with infrastructure and operational incentives for collective
and/or nonmotorized transport. Figure 4.17 illustrates the potential spectrum
of options for creating a city environment less dependent on private cars
and motorcycles than at present.
On the one side of this spectrum are areas that discourage vehicle use
without an absolute ban. Such areas are sometimes termed trafc-calmed
areas or even car-lite areas. In this case, cities and communities permit
Table 4.3 continued
Transport for Green Cities 201
full motorized-vehicle access, but deter unfettered use and speeds through
road design. As measures are introduced to prioritize public transport and
NMT, the overall sustainability improves. Finally, on the greenest side of the
spectrum are cities and communities that completely prohibit motorized
vehicles, effectively creating a zero-emission city. Figure 4.18 presents a
matrix that provides a sampling of Green City efforts in sustainable transport.
Figure 4.17 The spectrum of possibilities for transport in a Green City
Source: Wright (2012).
Car-Lite City Sustainable Transport City Zero-Emissions City
Trafc calming/
Shared space
Universally-
accessible
footpaths
Formalized public
transport system
Parking controls/
congestion pricing
City center
pedestrianization
Quality public
transport and
bicycle lanes
All private
motorized
vehicles banned
Fully-integrated
land use and
transport planning
Ubiquitous and
high-quality public
transport and cycle
way network
Figure 4.18 Examples of sustainable transport implementation
BRT = bus rapid transit, NMT = nonmotorized transport.
Source: Wright (2012).
Santiago (Chile) historical center Pasig City car-free Sunday
Strength of sustainable transport features
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Singapore congestion
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Bogot Sunday ciclovia
Bogot TransMilenio
Curitiba BRT and NMT Venice
Zermatt
Freiburg Vauban
Houten (Netherlands)
Shanghai Nanjing Road
Copenhagen city center
Vienna Gloridsdorf
Barcelona las Ramblas
Munich Kaufingstrae
Jakarta car-free Sunday
Paris Plage
Seoul Cheonggyecheon
Song Do
Fez
Mascar
London bus lanes
Quito Sunday ciclopaseo
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High sustainability impact
202 Green Cities
Car-lite cities
For most cities and communities, the abandonment of motorized vehicles will
not happen overnight. The funding available to create a Masdar (United Arab
Emirates) or a Song Do (Republic of Korea) can be prohibitive for many cities
and countries. Moreover, the political will required to transform a city in the
manner of a Bogot or a Curitiba is not always possible. However, cities and
communities may choose an intermediate step that at least begins to shift the
balance in urban design away from motorized vehicles. Measures which restrict
private vehicle movements and speeds are a basic step in this process.
The Tianjin Eco-City in the PRC has adopted a car-lite approach to its
design. Tianjin is utilizing mixed-use design to discourage car and motorcycle
use, in conjunction with the provision of quality public transport and NMT
facilities. The Tianjin Eco-City, though, will not restrict cars and motorcycles.
Whether a carrot-only approach can succeed in a rapidly growing economy
in which much social status is associated with vehicle ownership is yet to
be seen. Placing a few sticks into the regulatory environment that partially
or wholly restrict motorized vehicles may be a complementary approach for
aspiring Green Cities to consider.
Trafc Calming
Historically, trafc-calming measures have been seen as mechanisms for
improving pedestrian safety and curbing some of the negative impacts of
motorization. By making the streets take on the characteristics of a yard or
a park, motorists are obliged to curb dangerous speeds. The idea is to use
design features such as trees, chicanes, and bumps to force motorists into
acceptable behavior (Figure 4.19). Trafc calming was pioneered in the early
Figure 4.19
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Trafc calming measure in Paris (France) Shared space as practiced in Biel, Switzerland
Transport for Green Cities 203
1970s through woonerf designs in the Netherlands. Trafc calming may be
a necessary rst step in making residents realize that the streets are public
spaces that do not belong exclusively to the automobile.
Shared Space
One of the most innovative concepts in recent years has been the idea
of shared space, which is also known by several other names including
post-trafc calming and second-generation trafc calming. With shared
space, all physical differentiation between car space and pedestrian space
is removed.
The concept of shared space originated in the Netherlands with
applications in the cities of Drachten and Oosterwolde. Today, examples of
shared space can be found more widely.
The idea is that the lack of signage and road markings increases
uncertainty for motorists, who will then be more cautious within an undened
road environment. Through intrigue and uncertainty, motorists become
more engaged in their surroundings (Engwicht 1999). In an area of shared
space, neither pedestrians nor motorists have explicit signage to dictate
who has priority. People must resort to eye contact and other forms of subtle
communication to navigate the roadway, which leads to slower speeds and
safer conditions (Figure 4.20).
Temporary Interventions
Annual Car-Free Days
Car-free days are increasingly high-prole events that can be useful in
awakening a city and its residents to the possibilities of a different urban
environment. The principal premise behind such days is the idea of creating
a pattern break in which awareness of transport alternatives is promoted:
By creating a break in the normal pattern of behavior, Car-Free Days
(CFDs) can provide an opportunity for the citizens and the municipality to
take a step back and reconsider the development path of the transport
sector and whether it takes into account and meets the needs of all
peopleOn an even broader scale, CFDs can serve to spark a dialogue
about the future of the city and allow citizens to ask what exactly they
envision their city to become in say, 20, 50, and 70 years (UNCFD 2005).
The date 22 September is now recognized as International Car-Free Day
(Figure 4.21). The scope of the day varies depending on local circumstances.
In some cases, the event may be just one street in one sector of a city. In
other cases, there is a more expansive effort.
204 Green Cities
Figure 4.21
Car-Free Sundays
Also increasingly common are car-free Sundays on which cities dedicate
a portion of their street network to a weekly festival that promotes health,
green transport awareness, and community sociability. Cities that hold
such events include Bogot (Colombia), Jakarta (Indonesia), Lima (Peru),
Los Angeles (United States), Mexico City (Mexico), Montevideo (Uruguay),
Pasig City (Philippines), Porto Alegre (Brazil), Quito (Ecuador), Rio de Janeiro
(Brazil), Rosario (Argentina), Solo (Indonesia), and Surabaya (Indonesia).
Bogot closes 120 kilometers of urban arterial streets during its Sunday
Ciclovia. On this day, the city takes on a carnival atmosphere with as many
as two million persons taking to the streets either walking, cycling, skating,
or participating in community events (Figure 4.22). Bogota complements the
Sunday Ciclovia with a large permanent cycleway network, as well as a
quality BRT system known as TransMilenio.
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International car-free day in Zurich (Switzerland)
Transport for Green Cities 205
Quito closes its historical center to trafc and becomes a focal point for
families, tourists, and those attending religious services. On Sundays, Rio de
Janeiro closes Avenida Atlntica along the famous beach of Copacabana.
Car-Free Seasons
More broadly are car-free seasons in which an area is closed to motorized
trafc over a longer period. Since 2002, Paris (France) has created a car-free
area during the summer months along the Seine River. Known as the Paris
Plage (Paris Beach), the area is decorated with palm trees and sand. As
many as 3 million persons per week have visited the area, making it popular
with both local residents and visitors. The area has added a swimming pool
as well as sand boxes for castle building. The success of Paris Plage has
spawned similar efforts elsewhere. Cities as diverse as Berlin (Germany),
Rome (Italy), and Soweto (South Africa) have experimented with their own
forms of urban beaches.
Zero-Emission Cities
Several of the well-known Green City initiatives have created entirely car-free
living spaces in conjunction with quality public transport and nonmotorized
networks. These examples highlight the potential for broader implementation
of zero-carbon cities.
Figure 4.22
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The car-free Sunday Ciclovia in Bogota
206 Green Cities
Car-Free Cities
Masdar in Abu Dhabi has attempted to set a new standard for greeneld
Eco-City implementation. Masdar has aimed to become the rst major
community worldwide to achieve zero net carbon emissions. The city utilizes
traditional architecture to create intimate and safe, shaded streets that
encourage walking. At the same time, Masdar has constructed a personal
rapid transit system, which utilizes automated pod cars to take individuals
between major destinations in the city. The system is powered by Masdars
solar energy infrastructure.
While Masdar and other similar efforts provide a glimpse of what is
possible, for much of the world, the conversion of existing communities into
Green Cities is the actual task at hand. Thus, the lessons from a few car-
free historical cities are worth noting. Venice (Italy) and the medina of Fez
(Morocco) are probably the closest that any major urban areas have become
to true car-free cities. The central area of Fez most likely hosts the worlds
highest car-free population in a single concentrated area, with approximately
156,000 inhabitants (Figure 4.23, Wright 2005).
Figure 4.23
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The Medina of Fez (Morocco) is the worlds largest car-free city with over 156,000 inhabitants
Transport for Green Cities 207
The historic portion of Venice (Italy) is perhaps the best known of
cities that are predominantly car-free. In Venices case, this aversion to
the automobile is due to its unique geography and the need to retain its
historic character. Likewise, other historic and resort cities such as Louvain
la Neuve (Belgium), Capri (Italy), and Zermatt (Switzerland) are essentially
car-free within city boundaries. Venice, Capri, and Zermatt are also notable
as locations with some of the worlds highest residential property values,
thus indicating that car-free locations can in fact bolster economic value.
Even within cities that are almost completely car-free, there are times
when exceptions are permitted, such as the use of emergency vehicles.
There are also many examples of cities that permit small electric vehicles to
assist with the movement of goods and the transit of the elderly or disabled
persons (e.g., Zermatt, Switzerland).
Car-Free Housing
Car-free housing represents a new market-driven force that allows
consumers to choose a residential area without the dangers of motorization.
Such housing has become popular in Europe as a niche market for families
and individuals wishing to improve their quality of life through a car-free
environment. The success of these developments has demonstrated that
families are placing a discernible market value on neighborhoods that permit
children to play without fear of the noise, pollution, and accidents generated
by unrestricted car access. Such communities are typically developed
around accessible and high-quality public transport systems, as well as
extensive cycleway networks.
Among the most renowned examples of car-free housing projects
are: BedZed (London, United Kingdom), Barmbek-Saarlandstrasse
(Hamburg, Germany), Florisdorf (Vienna, Austria), GWL-terrein (Amsterdam,
Netherlands), Langwaser (Nrnberg, Germany), Oyumino (Chiba, Japan),
Slateford Green (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), Stuttgarter Strasse
(Tbingen, Germany), and Vauban (Freiburg, Germany) (Scheurer 2002).
The Vauban development in Freiburg is the largest car-free community of its
type, with approximately 5,000 residents (Figure 4.24). Residents may own
a vehicle, but it must be stored outside the community at an annual cost of
approximately 17,500 (Autofrei Wohnen 2012).
208 Green Cities
Figure 4.24
Integrating Transport and the Green City
Green transport is just one requisite for a Green City. Other chapters of this
book have elaborated upon innovations in spatial development, energy
systems, waste management, water systems, and information management.
However, developing each of these components individually does not
make for a synergistic package of interventions. Opportunities exist for
incorporating aspects of each of these elements within detailed aspects of
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The Vauban car-free community in Freiburg (Germany) is home to 5,000 residents
Transport for Green Cities 209
green transport development. This section outlines examples of how green
transport planning can be integrated with these other sectors to produce a
more holistic outcome.
The synergies between transport and each of the other municipal sectors
will not become apparent if sector planning is conducted in isolation. The
mutual benets shared by the various sectors of Green Cities are best realized
through an integrated and holistic planning process in which municipal
ofcials, nancing organizations, and private sector partners aggressively
seek out opportunities.
Transport and Spatial Development
Transport and spatial development are perhaps the most inseparable
components of a full Green City plan. A well-executed spatial development
plan incorporating smart growth designs means that motorized travel can
be largely forgone.
Smart growth design concepts were developed during the New
Urbanist Movement of the 1990s. Smart growth seeks to counter sprawl
through mixed-use, higher-density development (Calthorpe 1994, Katz
1994). Mixed-use design that allows residential, commercial, and even light
industrial activities to coexist in close or even overlapping proximity permits
inhabitants to live, work, shop, and recreate in the same neighborhood
(Figure 4.25). Medium- and high-density development gives communities
the necessary economies of scale to support quality public transport.
It is not just that well-designed spatial development leads to green
transport, but rather that these two aspects of urban life interact in a
way that facilitates smart-growth development. Thus, green transport
designs facilitate better spatial development. Transit-oriented design
focuses development around public transport nodes such as stations and
interchange facilities. Since public transport nodes focus a large number of
persons into a dened space, a critical mass of pedestrian numbers in turn
enhances property values in a way that makes smart-growth development
nancially viable.
Land-use patterns are often dened around the three Ds of density,
diversity, and design. Green transport modes, such as public transport and
nonmotorized transport (NMT), are often used as tools to achieve spatial
development that maximizes the potential of the three Ds.
210 Green Cities
Transport and Energy
As noted in this chapter, a new mix of alternative fuels is beginning to
achieve breakthroughs in the cost competitiveness and market share of
environmentally sound transport modes. Among the potential alternative
fuel and propulsion systems are hybrid-electric and plug-in electric vehicles,
and vehicles powered by natural gas, biomethane, and biofuels. The idea
of smart grids in which electric vehicles effectively act as batteries for the
power generation system holds much potential for supporting both cleaner
vehicles and the expanding renewable energy sector.
In addition to vehicle technologies, public transport systems such as bus
rapid transit, light rail transit, and bicycle-sharing systems also offer other
types of opportunities for showcasing alternative energy technologies. The
location and power requirements of public transport stations are often well
suited to renewable energy technologies such as solar photovoltaic panels.
Such stations are typically located in roadway medians that provide relatively
uninhibited exposure to sunlight. At the same time, the lack of existing power
Figure 4.25
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Mixed-use design, as in this example from Shanghai (Peoples Republic of China), enables a high-
quality living environment by placing public amenities in close proximity to one another
Transport for Green Cities 211
connections to new station areas means that solar photovoltaic panels can
compete nancially with conventional options.
The exposure of renewable energy technologies at public transport and
bicycle-sharing facilities also serves a key marketing purpose as well. The
highly public display of solar photovoltaic panels acts to mainstream these
technologies within the public sphere (Figure 4.26).
Public transport stations and corridors are also appropriate locations
for investment in energy-efcient lighting, both in terms of interior lighting
and street lighting. Transport facilities are ideal markets for efcient lighting
technologies, such as compact uorescent lamps for station interiors and
light-emitting diode technologies for information signage and street lights.
Both the technical application and the bulk procurement aspects of these
facilities lend themselves to the performance and cost-effectiveness of
these lighting technologies.
Figure 4.26
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A photovoltaic panel helps meet power needs at a bus rapid transit station in Johannesburg,
South Africa.
212 Green Cities
Transport and Waste Management
Transport is well positioned to be both a catalyst and an enabler of greener
waste management.
First, the rise of biomethane (i.e., biogas) as an alternative fuel option has
created a new market dynamic for encouraging investment in effective waste
management systems. Biomethane is a gas produced from the biological
breakdown of organic matter in the absence of oxygen (i.e., anaerobic
digestion or fermentation). A wide variety of waste streams are suitable to the
production of biomethane, including solid consumer wastes, sewage sludge
and wastewater, food and agricultural wastes, and animal wastes.
Transport gives value to implementing systems that lead to the more rational
collection and processing of waste streams. Recycling programs help produce
cleaner wastes that are more useful and valuable in producing biomethane.
The capital-intensive nature of establishing wastewater piping networks can be
partially nanced through the use of waste as a transport fuel.
As oil prices continue to undergo increases and bouts of volatility, the
competitiveness of fuels such as biomethane becomes sufcient to justify
investments in better waste management.
Second, public transport and bicycle-sharing stations are also logical
venues for waste management facilities. These stations attract a large
number of customers, which provide the critical mass needed to cost-
effectively collect and manage solid wastes (Figure 4.27). In many cases,
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Recycling bin on the platform of a
Frankfurt (Germany) rail station
Cargo bicycles are utilized to move recyclable waste
materials in Johannesburg (South Africa)
Transport for Green Cities 213
the dedicated lanes of bus and light rapid transit systems provide an ideal
means of permitting efcient operation of waste management vehicles in
urban areas. In addition, nonmotorized vehicles can be effectively employed
in hauling and centralizing waste collection within urban areas (Figure 4.28).
As has been demonstrated in other sectors, greener waste management
and greener transport modes share mutual synergies that result in cost
effectiveness and increasing market share for both.
Transport and Water
As noted above, transport can create a value-adding opportunity for
investment in wastewater systems through the production of biomethane that
can be used as a transport fuel. The long-term value of biogas capture can
help justify investment in a wastewater collection and processing system.
In many cases, transport infrastructure may also help catalyze investment
in cleaner waterways. As demonstrated by the greenway investments in
Seoul (Republic of Korea) and Guangzhou (PRC), the proper treatment of
wastewater is fundamental to such waterways being utilized as pedestrian
thoroughfares (Figure 4.29). Likewise, the current initiative of cleaning up the
Pasig River in Manila (Philippines) can bring together efforts at both restoring
an urban environment and creating a greenway network across the city.
Figure 4.29
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The Cheongycheon stream restoration in Seoul, Republic of Korea transformed a water resource
as well as created a new greenway corridor through the city
214 Green Cities
As is also the case above with energy and waste management, public
transport facilities can be a logical venue for water-capture investments.
Rainwater captured from the roofs of public transport stations can in turn be
used in public toilets at these stations, as well as for watering landscaping
along the public transport corridor.
Transport and Urban Agriculture
Urban agriculture contributes to local food security, reduces pressures on
hinterland habitats, and provides nourishment to low-income populations
in urban areas. Growing food locally changes the historical relationship
between transport and agricultural production.
The fact that urban agriculture makes crops and produce available in
close proximity to markets means that the traditional distribution and logistics
chain is no longer necessary. Instead of requiring complex distribution through
shipping and trucking rms that employ energy-consuming technologies to
deliver perishable products, more locally appropriate options are possible.
With food production either within a few hundred meters or a few
kilometers of markets, carts and other nonmotorized cargo modes are both
feasible and desirable. Urban agriculture often means fresher food quality,
which can mean processing in smaller batches. This type of production is
well suited to batch-type cargo vehicles that do not have large environmental
footprints and depend on costly logistics.
Conclusion
Access and mobility are fundamental enablers of development. Unfortunately,
as rapid urbanization has led to rapid motorization, the preferred form of
mobility, specically private cars and motorcycles, has ironically resulted in
less access and mobility. Congestion, contamination, and road deaths are
increasingly a dening feature of modern cities, and especially cities of the
developing world.
The alternative transport pathway for green cities is achieved through
designing away the need for private motorized transport in the rst place.
The AvoidShiftImprove framework articulates both the content and
priorities that seem to best present such an alternative. A synergistic
package of mixed-use development, integrated spatial planning, quality
public transport and NMT facilities, disincentives to car and motorcycle use,
and clean vehicle technologies offers a way forward toward Green Cities.
Transport for Green Cities 215
The results of experiments in car-lite and car-free environments indicate
that the Green City vision is indeed realizable. The plethora of cities that
have implemented car-free Sundays demonstrates the popularity of such
measures with the public. The emergence of purpose-built Green Cities such
as Masdar and Song Do, in addition to historically car-free cities such as Fez
and Venice may indicate that a new momentum has gathered for sustainable
transport as a central planning principle. The market-driven nature of car-
free communities, such as Vauban in Germany, means that a percentage
of the population indeed prioritizes quality-of-life in choosing living options.
Mobility and exchange were the reason for the invention of urban areas.
It is therefore appropriate that a new vision for transport is the basis for
transforming todays cities.
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218
CHAPTER 5
Green Cities:
A Water-Secure Future
by Alan Baird and Theresa Audrey O. Esteban with contributions from
Maria C. Ebarvia and Francisco Roble, Jr.
Water Insecurity: A Growing Threat to
Economic Growth and Sustainable Development
of Our Cities
An Era of Water Scarcity
U
rbanization has spawned the rapid emergence of megacities. By
2015, it is expected that there will be about 60 megacities in the
world. A troubling trend is that the most rapid urban growth is taking
place in the economically weakest countries. Similarly, this growth is taking
place in regions in which water resource endowments are limited, technical
and management capacities are comparatively poor, and institutions are
relatively weak.
1
This makes successful water management of the river basins
surrounding the megacities of the developing world a most challenging and
complex task (J. Lundqvist, J., A. Biswas, C. Tortajada, and O. Varis 2006).
Asian Water Development Outlook 2007 (AWDO 2007) published by
the Asian Development Bank (ADB) indicated that Asian countries are likely
to witness massive urbanization over the coming 23 decades. However,
growth rates across the regions various types of urban areas (megacities,
large cities, and other urban centers) will differ. AWDO 2007 suggests
1
Annual per capita water endowment (or endowment) is the notional volume of water (in
cubic meters) available to each resident of a city, region, or country annually. It is calculated
as the volume of accessible (reliable) freshwater available each year, divided by the number
of residents in the jurisdiction in question.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 219
A woman accessing drinking water
that while megacities and large cities consume a larger share of national
resources, population growth rates in these larger urban areas will be much
slower than those in smaller urban centers. This implies that the regions
various types of cities will face differing types of challenges.
Continuing human migration to the regions cities brings with it a parallel
growing demand for delivery of basic services, water in particular. While
the supply of water in some cities has kept pace with this rising demand,
the question remains as to whether the water supplied will continue to be
both economically accessible and t for treatment to potable standards.
However, there is an additional dimension to meeting this demand, which is
its sustainability and resilience. Many cities rely on nonrenewable sources of
freshwater, or supplies that lack resilience to seasonal weather patterns and/
or the future impacts of climate change. This results in continual reductions
in the supply of water available to such jurisdictions over time.
The importance of providing water that is t for purpose underscores
the fact that freshwater is a scarce resource that must be managed if it
is to remain available over time. In their water-sensitive cities framework,
Brown, Keath, and Wong (2009) emphasize that obtaining water-sensitive
city status (which is roughly equivalent to a citys being livable) implies
that environmental repair and protection, supply security, ood control,
public health, and economic sustainability are well integrated. These factors
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thus must be built into a citys development agenda, which should have a
particular focus on managing dwindling supplies of accessible freshwater
and on ending the practice of mining nonrenewable sources.
For a city to be green and self-sustaining, it must engage in the complex
process of unbundling its water security status, and mapping out both the
problems and solutions associated with it. To illustrate the issues relating to
water security status, and to identify some choices and solutions regarding
it, the authors have particularly focused on Asia and the Pacic.
Putting Cities in Their Place
Water security is beginning to be recognized as a signicant issue for the
21st century. Until recently, water has generally been perceived as being
an abundant, accessible, and renewable resource. While threats to water
availability constitute a global issue, at the regional level these threats are
concentrated in particular areas such as river basins and cities.
2
Ultimately, cities share water with other users that are located within a
single river basin, the latter often being geographically much larger than even
a megacity. Thus, while cities are important users of water in terms of quantity
consumed, for most river basins, they are by no means its major consumers.
3
As a result, security-of-supply issues should always be set in the context of the
overall river basin concerned, rather than in the context of the city in question.
2
Water stress exists when per capita water endowments fall short of 1,700 cubic meters.
3
In many of Asias river basins, agriculture accounts for up to 80% of all water used by human
activity. However, this does not equate to agricultural consumption, since much of the water used
by irrigation systems is returned to the river basin concerned as surface water or groundwater.
A mother and child preparing to sh in a river
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 221
Few urban residents, businesses, or administrators even speak about
their city in the context of that citys corresponding river basin. As a result,
these three groups are often conspicuously absent at discussions that
concern the need for robust basin-level management of shared water
resources. This is unfortunate, since river basins are the source of all water
used by cities. Further, if a sound approach to managing scarce water
resources is absent, the city in question will not have a secure or sustainable
future water supply.
As a result, economic advance in a particular city, or even the region to
which that city belongs, may be constrained, since water shortages impact
both a citys level of industrial productivity and local production of food and
energy. Thus, the waterfoodenergy nexus functions as a shorthand for the
links between an urban centers water, food, and energy supplies.
4

Water Insecurity and Cities
The consequences of a particular city failing to achieve water security are
profound. Cities serve as economic and political centers of the regions and
countries to which they relate. Furthermore, all industrial, commercial, and
domestic activities use water. While the volume of water consumed by such
activities falls short of that diverted into agricultural uses, cities account
for a signicant share of total water use and, often, misuse. Because, as
pointed out, unsustainable management of the water resource threatens the
economic activities that take place in cities, the challenge is to prevent cities
and the river basins of which they are part from lurching toward water stress,
and, ultimately, water scarcity.
5

Many cities in developing countries face challenges associated with
their sheer scale, these challenges themselves making prudent planning
for water security difcult. These include rapid population growth, transient
communities and/or squatter areas of signicant size or scale, rapid
economic growth, ill-considered town planning, and the negative impacts
of climate change. In such cities, simply keeping pace with the burgeoning
demands that are placed on the water resource seems a nearly impossible
task. This is particularly true because the pace of growth these cities are
experiencing is without precedent. Thus, historical examples of how other
cities have addressed the challenges that todays Asian urban areas are
4
The waterfoodenergy nexus (or waterfoodenergy security nexus) refers to the
relationship between water use across the industrial, energy, agriculture, and municipal
sectors.
5
Water scarcity is generally dened as availability that falls short of 1,000 cubic meters per
capita per year.
222 Green Cities
facing are nonexistent. Not only did
the pace of most Western European
and North American cities grow more
slowly than that at which todays
large Asian cities are growing, but
these older cities also experienced
their most rapid growth during an
era in which there was great public
sector interest in delivering and
nancing municipal services.
At the basin or catchment
level, some regions face a more
uncertain water-security future
than do others. For example, Asia
and the Pacic has the lowest per
capita availability of freshwater in
the world (UNESCAP 2006). Further,
rapid urbanization and consequent
waste both contribute to pollution
of dwindling supplies of accessible
freshwater.
A number of respected organizations have presented compelling evidence
of either existing or emerging water scarcity. The most frequently referenced
study in this regard is Charting Our Water Future (2009) by the 2030 Water
Resources Group. In sum, their analysis shows that assuming present
consumption trends continue, and that the total annual sustainable supply
of freshwater remains static at 4,200 billion cubic meters (m
3
), the annual
decit forecast for 2030 is 2,765 billion m
3
, or 40% of unconstrained demand.
This supply gap (see Figure 5.1) has become the starting point for much of
the current narrative surrounding water security. In short, the gap between
sustainable supply from global river catchments and projected demand in
2030 is 40%.
In some catchments, this gap is already evident during periods of below-
average rainfall. While demand from the domestic sector pales in comparison
with the other sectors, water is as much a local (i.e., city-level) issue as it is
a regional, national, and global one. The most signicant challenge is that of
how demand for water might be reduced. Because affordable supply-side
options have all but been exhausted, demand-management interventions
are now the focus of policy makers, urban policy makers in many cases
taking the lead in this regard.
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 223
Not Just About Quantity
Many regions face challenges regarding declining availability of freshwater.
For example, while Asia accounts for only 36% of the worlds total water
supply, Asia and the Pacic is home to more than 60% of the worlds
population. Furthermore, approximately 477 million people in the region
have no access to safe water, and 1.8 billion people have no access to
improved sanitation facilities whatsoever (WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring
Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation 2010). Freshwater is thus a
limited resource, and one that is declining in volume in many regions because
of various factors. Its availability is also increasingly threatened by rapid
population growth, expanding industrial and agricultural activity, growth of
urban areas, and climate change, the latter threatening to alter hydrologic
cycles in major ways.
As cities grow in linear terms, the amount of waste they generate grows
exponentially. Thus, rather than being simply an unsightly inconvenience,
pollution depreciates property values, discourages economic development,
negatively impacts health and productivity, raises municipal bills (and taxes),
contaminates drinking water, spoils the water used to provide numerous
urban amenities, and creates countless other hazards. Despite these
Figure 5.1 Forecast Water Shortage for 2030
Note: The analysis determined that todays naturally renewable and available supply is about
4,200 cubic kilometers (km
3
), being about 16% groundwater and 84% surface water. Based on the
demand of the domestic (or municipal), industrial, and agriculture sectors, demand of about 6,906
km
3
in 2030 would outstrip supply by that year. This shortfall of approximately 2,765 km
3
is known
as the supply gap.
Source: 2030 Water Resources Group (2009).
km
2
, 154 basin/regions
Domestic
Industry
Agriculture
2005
demand
2030
demand
Basins with
deficits
Naturally renewed,
available supply
Surface water
Groundwater 688
3,534
4,200
-40%
2.0%
2,765
4,500
600
800
3,100
4,531
1,531
843
6,906
224 Green Cities
negative impacts, solid waste and wastewater from various sources continue
to be discharged without appropriate treatment. In Asia and the Pacic
alone, approximately 80% of all wastewater is discharged in its untreated
form (Corcoran et al. 2010). Moreover, open defecation practices, lack of
improved sanitation facilities, and inadequate solid waste and wastewater
management systems pollute groundwater, rivers, and coastlines, which
constitute the same bodies of water that are used for drinking, shing, bathing,
and swimming. Much of what water is available is thus contaminated to one
degree or another. As a result, the source of the water crisis threatening
many cities and regions is pollution of existing water resources.
Finally, the manner in which freshwater is allocated in the regions cities
has generally assigned a low priority to environmental quality and aquatic
biodiversity, which has likewise negatively impacted the sustainability of this
important resource. As a result, water in many urban areas has often been
used as a dump site for untreated waste to such a degree that the natural
self-cleansing capacity of water bodies was exceeded long ago. In sum, if
economic advance is to proceed at the pace it had in the past, cities must
give high priority to protecting their water resources, most importantly by
reducing the rate at which untreated solid and liquid waste is discharged into
water bodies, regardless of whether this waste is of industrial, agricultural,
or municipal origin.
Envisioning Water-Secure Cities
A State of Water Security
Asian Water Development Outlook 2012 (AWDO 2012) identies ve key
dimensions of water security: (i) satisfying household water and sanitation
needs in all communities; (ii) supporting agricultural and industrial production;
(iii) developing vibrant, livable cities and towns; (iv) restoring the health of
rivers and ecosystems; and (v) building resilient communities that can adapt
to change (ADB 2012).
These ve key dimensions in turn relate to ve different types of water
security as follows: (i) household water security, (ii) economic water security,
(iii) urban water security, (iv) environmental water security, and (v) water-
related disaster resilience.
In short, achieving all ve types of water security at the city level
requires that policy makers address all issues relating to (i) water supply,
(ii) wastewater treatment, and (iii) ood control. However, the concrete steps
necessary for addressing these three sets of issues vary widely from city to
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 225
city and river basin to river basin. Thus, no prescribed series of steps can
be identied for consistently addressing a particular citys water security
related issues, or for formulating appropriate solutions to them.
AWDO 2012 summarizes the widely varying indicators used by the
countries of Asia and the Pacic in assessing the level of water security they
have attained. The wide variation in the indicators used across the region
demonstrates the complexity of achieving water security by particular cities
or countries.
Table 5.1 uses the Composite Water Security Index (CWSI) developed
by AWDO 2012 to summarize the degree to which selected countries of
Asia and the Pacic have achieved water security. The values for this index
range from 1 to 5, the latter representing the highest score in achieving water
security, while a value of 1 indicates that the level of water security achieved
by the country in question is unsustainable.
The values reported in Table 5.1 demonstrate that no country included in
the results has reached a model level of water security. In fact, most have
yet to achieve effective or even capable status. Note that the CWSI can
be used by policy makers at the city level as well as the country level.
A mother and child using a public tap
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226 Green Cities
Table 5.1 Composite Water Security Index Values for Selected Countries of
Asia and the Pacic
CWSI
Water Security
Status Criteria
Number of
Countries
5 Model
Sustainable nancing for water
security, environmental protection and
management already established
0
4 Effective
Water security given high priority in the
national agenda; appropriate public
investment in water security; effective
regulation and enforcement; public
awareness and ongoing behavioral
changes apparent
4
3 Capable
Increasing levels of investment and
strength of regulation and enforcement;
water security and environment
recognized as priorities in the national
development agenda; improving
technical and nancial capacities in
addressing water-related issues
10
2 Engaged
Need to invest in water security
recognized, including investment
in capacity-building programs;
ongoing institutional development
and strengthening; improving policy
environment in which water-related
issues are addressed
29
1 Hazardous
Inadequate levels of investment in water-
related infrastructure and poor-quality
regulation and enforcement result in
hazardous levels of water security
5
CWSI = Composite Water Security Index.
Source: Asian Water Development/ADB (2012).
In the end, the degree to which water security for the countries of the
region is attained will directly depend on the degree to which policy makers
see appropriate management of the regions river basins as a precondition
for sustained rapid economic advance.
A Sustainable Water Future
The ve key dimensions of water security referred to at the beginning
of this section can be mapped in terms of their urgency, with the rst of
these dimensions (satisfying household water and sanitation needs in all
communities) being the most urgent. Figure 5.2 depicts these ve dimensions
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 227
in terms of their relative urgency and identies the issues associated with each
that policy makers must address if long-term water security is to be achieved.
Each key dimension referred to above relates to a set of issues regarding
water management, governance, and use that policy makers must ultimately
address for water security to be attained. For example, economic water
security (key dimension 2) relates to water security in the agriculture, energy
production, and industrial sectors.
Note that while water-related disaster resilience (key dimension 5)
reects the fact that healthy rivers provide the very foundation of a water-
secure future, attention to this dimension has historically only occurred when
the city or country concerned has achieved a relatively high level of per
capita income. While it is thus unsurprising that undertaking the investments
required to restore and protect the regions river basins is long overdue, both
the scale and pace of population growth in the region are of such magnitude
that making these investments has now become a precondition to achieving
the high levels of per capita income that are universally desired.
KD = key dimension.
Source: ADB/AWDO (Patterned after Maslow [1943]).
KD
4
3
5
2
1 Drinking Water Sanitation
Employment Energy Production Food Production
Freedom for Flood Risks
Water
Supply
Sewer City
Healthy Rivers
Drained City
Water Way
City
Water Cycle
City
Freedom for Drought Risks
Figure 5.2 Diagrammatic Representation of the Five Key Dimensions of
Water Security and Corresponding Policy-Related Issues
228 Green Cities
Pathways to Water Security
As mentioned, the responses to water-related issues required of policy
makers in a particular city or country to achieve water security are widely
divergent. Furthermore, to achieve this goal, these responses must be
based on appropriate analysis of all data and information relating to the
level of water security currently attained. In this regard, policy makers face
two obstacles. First, the critical mass of data relating to water security may
be absent. Second, the wide variation in the conditions faced by each city
or country makes it impossible to formulate a consistent methodology for
performing such an analysis. Such difculties notwithstanding, AWDO 2012
reports quantitative values for water security indicators relating to each
of the key dimensions referred to earlier for 48 countries of Asia and the
Pacic. These water security indicators relating to the ve key dimensions
of water security referred to can be used as a starting point for city- or
country-specic analysis of the degree of water security currently attained
by a particular jurisdiction.
The analysis underpinning the indicators reported by AWDO 2012 was
based on publicly available data, these being supplemented by additional
surveys commissioned as part of the preparation of AWDO 2012. Figure 5.3
Source: ADB (2012).
Water-Related Disaster
Resilience
Household Water Security
Economic Water Security
Urban Water Security
South Asia
Southeast Asia
Developed Economies
Environmental Water
Security
South Asia
Southeast Asia
Developed Economies 3.87
2.73
1.99
Figure 5.3 Water Security in Asia and the Pacic
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 229
summarizes these indicators for both the South Asia and Southeast Asia
geographic groupings, as well as for the regions developed economies
taken together as a group.
It is important to remember that the variation in the CWSIs for the
three groupings depicted in Figure 5.3 reects the degree of water security
achieved during a particular period. Thus, what Figure 5.3 does not depict
is the fact that most of the regions countries have begun to take action to
increase their respective levels of water security. In fact, of the 48 countries
for which results are reported in Figure 5.3, 29 are actively improving their
respective levels of water security. Moreover, a further 10 countries are
putting into place the institutional capacity, regulatory framework, and set of
investments necessary for improving their respective levels of water security
(Table 5.1). While four of the countries depicted have already effectively
achieved water security, none have achieved the status of model security.
Thus, all hold the potential for further improvement.
Albeit with appropriate modications, the approach to assessing the
degree of water security attained as presented can be used by jurisdictions
the world over to both assess the level of water security attained and
formulate the concrete steps necessary for attaining it. These latter steps
inevitably include appropriate policy and legislation, institutional change,
and investments by both the public and private sectors.
Delivering Appropriate Levels of Service
Mixed Results in Meeting Millennium Development
Goal Targets
The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target for drinking water was
broadly met in 2010. That is, the percentage share of people without access
to improved drinking water supplies was more than halved, from 24% in
1990 to 11% in 2010. However, although sanitation coverage of the regions
population increased from 49% in 1990 to 63% in 2010, this still falls far
short of the target of 75% set for 2015. Thus, at the current rate of progress,
the target for 2015 would only be met in 2026 (UNICEF and WHO 2012).
This latter outcome has long-term implications for the pace of economic
advance in the region, since inadequate wastewater management and poor
sanitation in urban areas is a major barrier to attaining and maintaining water
security. Furthermore, untreated waste despoils already diminishing supplies
of freshwater at a rapid pace, thus threatening water security and thence
sustainable development. For many of the regions cities, this latter threat
to sustainable development is far more immediate than is climate change.
230 Green Cities
In 2010, the percentage shares of the population with access to
appropriate sanitation facilities in the various subregions of developing Asia
were: South Asia, 41%; Oceania, 55%; East Asia, 66%; Southeast Asia,
69%; and Central Asia, 96%.
6
In addition, 40% of the regions population
that have gained access to improved sanitation facilities since 1990 live
in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) and India (WHO/UNICEF Joint
Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation 2010).
While globally open defecation has declined signicantly, it was still
practiced by 15% of the worlds populationapproximately 1.1 billion
peoplein 2010, the majority of these persons living in rural areas. By region,
rural South Asia reported the highest share of the population practicing open
defecation at 55%.
Globally, 79% of the urban population has access to improved sanitation
facilities, as compared to 47% of the rural population. However, the progress
thus achieved in percentage share terms obscures the fact that due to
6
The data presented refer to subregions of Asia and the Pacic as dened by the Asian
Development Bank.
Children fetching water
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 231
rapid urban growth, the absolute number of urban residents without access
to improved facilities increased from 531 million in 1990 to 714 million in
2010 (WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and
Sanitation 2010).
Such statistics graphically illustrate the challenge that many developing-
country cities face in keeping pace with the demands on service delivery
brought about by rapid ruralurban migration. When viewed from a more
positive perspective, rapid ruralurban migration expands potential
economies of scale in service delivery, thus creating an opportunity for cities
to become global leaders in delivering appropriate, nancially viable, and
sustainable water supply and sanitation services.
Making Sanitation Everyones Business
ADBs Dignity, Disease, and Dollars (2007) call to action for sanitation
focuses on the three variables that stakeholders at all levels of administration
must focus on if appropriate sanitation is to be achieved for every village,
town, and city in the region. This is because such facilities are a precondition
for achieving dignity for all of the regions inhabitants, for preventing the
spread of disease, and for ensuring both the nancial viability of sanitation
service providers and affordability of such services at the household level. In
this regard, sanitation facilities include appropriately managing wastewater
not just from a technical or engineering point of view but also from a
perspective that addresses all of its social, political, and environmental
complexities.
Pollution of rivers continues to challenge Southeast Asias developed and developing
countries alike
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232 Green Cities
Budgetary challenges often hamper implementation of even well-
thought-out sanitation agendas. For example, sanitation is often perceived
to be a high-cost service and, in many cases, therefore unaffordable. As a
result, even when incorporated into national plans, sanitation has not been
given high enough budgetary priority by governments and city authorities
to ensure that sufcient funding is available for nancing the proposed
improvements.
However, such a view ignores the fact that adequate sanitation facilities
have been proven to be (i) affordable by most households, (ii) nancially
viable as a utility service, and (iii) capable of more than paying back
any government investment in such facilities. In fact, the World Health
Organization (2004) cites an average rate of payback in the range of $3$36
for each dollar invested in sanitation. The logic of providing reliable and
affordable sanitation services to entire populations as a means of accelerating
the pace of economic advance is thus well founded.
Provision of appropriate wastewater management and sanitation
services are not merely issues of human dignity, health, and environmental
protection. They are instead preconditions to achieving water security. In
East and South Asia, the percentage of untreated wastewater produced that
leaches into accessible fresh or coastal waters is 89% and 85%, respectively
(UNEP 2004). Surface water resources in both India and the PRC are being
rapidly polluted, often irreparably. Along many stretches of both the Ganges
River in India and the Yellow River in the PRC, the water is now unusable for
agricultural purposes. In short, degradation of the freshwater resources of
many of Asias subregions is taking place at a rate so rapid that environmental
sustainability is at risk on a large scale.
Creating Livable Cities through Provision of
Water Services
While making cities more livable is cited as a continuing challenge
confronting Asia and the Pacic, livability is a term that nearly dees
denitive description. This difculty in dening what constitutes an
acceptable level of water supply or sanitation service is mirrored in the MDGs
in that the MDGs measure progress relating to both in terms of access and
improved, these terms being subject to wide interpretation.
In the context of a particular city or country, such vagaries can be avoided
by focusing on what constitutes an optimal level of service for the jurisdiction
concerned, which is inevitably circumscribed by what end-users want and
can afford. Further, an optimal service is one that is sustainable over the
long termwhich means that providing an optimal level of service is fully
consistent with attaining water security. That said, many cities tolerate not
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 233
only service levels that differ substantially from average national, regional,
or global levels but, more importantly, marked differences in the quality of
service delivered within their own city limits.
This is logical when what constitutes an acceptable level of service is set
in the context of available nancing. For example, approximately 60% of the
regions population lacks access to appropriate water supply, and 73% lack
access to improved sanitation facilities. To reduce these numbers sufciently
to meet the relevant MDG targets, approximately $18 billion annually in
additional investment would be required, an additional $15 billion$20 billion
annually being required to maintain and improve these services that serve
the same beneciary pool (Rao and Seetharam 2006, Toubkiss 2006).
In addition to the inconvenience caused, an intermittent water supply
negatively impacts water quality. To compensate for intermittent service,
many people invest in overhead tanks. While such tanks allow short-term
water storage, the regular cleaning of these tanks required to maintain
water quality seldom occurs, which results in reduced water quality at
the household level. More importantly, together with inadequately funded
maintenance of water mains, intermittently supplied water causes the
pressure in water mains to fall to such low levels that sewage and other
contaminants enter the urban water supply (McIntosh 2003).
In many of the regions cities, lack of wastewater treatment facilities
impacts both water quality and health. Pollution wastewater may be
municipal in origin (wastewater from homes and commercial establishments)
or industrial and agricultural (chemicals used in these sectors impacting the
quality of agricultural or industrial run-off) (McIntosh 2003). Both negatively
impact water supply and quality. It has been mentioned a number of times
A modern low-cost wastewater treatment planta rarity in developing Asia
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234 Green Cities
that waterborne disease has claimed more lives than any war. In fact,
1.6 million deaths per year are attributable to unsafe water, poor sanitation,
and lack of appropriate hygiene practices (UN Millennium Project, Task
Force on Water and Sanitation 2005). Improving sanitation and delivering
safe drinking water are thus critical inputs in maintaining health, combating
disease, and reaching the health-related MDGs.
Appropriate and Sustainable Levels of Service
Water supply is no longer dened as simply providing water to a dened
set of users within a particular geographic area. Instead, it encompasses
sustainability and inclusive-growth issues, the latter implying that water is
critical for meeting the growing demands of energy and food production,
and more broadly, long-term sustainable development in urban areas.
Thus, supplying water to cities must take account of both growing resource
constraints globally, as well as the trade-offs inherent in meeting the
competing demands of various classes of water users.
The fact that the city proper is often far smaller than the urban
agglomeration in which it exists tends to complicate planning for water
infrastructure and often obscures a major component of total demand.
Thus, from a practical perspective, planning water supply and wastewater
management services is often constrained by mismatches between service
Poor maintenance of water supply and sanitation infrastructure is a major problem in the region.
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 235
areas and administrative boundaries. Similarly, poor governance often
hampers efcient planning, nearly always prevents new approaches from
being considered, and usually results in inadequate nancing of the facilities
required for meeting effective demand.
Due to inherent problems in dening terms such as needs, equitable,
improved, and even access as these relate to water supply and sanitation
services, both rural and urban low-income communities are often the most
marginalized in terms of service coverage and quality.
Many water and wastewater service providers face signicant
challenges in delivering services to ever-growing urban populations. Many
providers face additional issues such as increased precipitation rates, and
more frequent and severe natural disasters and drought. Aging and often
inefciently operated systems further compound the challenges faced by
such providers.
With some notable exceptions, many water and wastewater service
providers in the regions developing countries lack the human and nancial
capacity to cope with the challenges inherent in simply maintaining current
service levels, much less addressing those resulting from growing demand.
In particular, lack of appropriate nancing impacts capital investment levels,
capacity expansion, and maintenance, thus making it difcult to sustain
current service levels.
Box 5.1 Uneven Access to Water in Malaysia
Water supply and wastewater management services have developed unevenly
in Malaysia, with the more developed states achieving nearly universal coverage,
while less developed states face continuing difficulties in expanding access to
services, this being particularly true in rural areas. Furthermore, the countrys
more developed states are able to attract private sector investment in water
and wastewater services, while poorer states rely on public provision. These
differences have caused levels of access to vary significantly.
For example, in 1994, 56% of the population living in the poorest states had
access to improved water supply compared with 94% in the richest states. While
the corresponding figures for 1999 were 74% and 96%, respectively, affordability
for low-income households worsened, while it improved for higher-income
households. In 1999, the poorest households spent 1.5% of their income on
water, while the richest households spent only 0.7%.
Source: Derived from N. Prasad. 2007. Social Policies and Water Sector Reform. Markets, Business, and
Regulation Program Paper. No. 3. Geneva: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development.
236 Green Cities
Moreover, local governments frequently lack the nancial and human
resources required for improving or expanding the coverage of wastewater
services. Thus, residents of many cities in developing countries lack access
to piped sewerage facilities, causing them to rely on septic tanks. In sum,
in much of the region, the capacity of sewerage systems, including septage
collection and treatment, falls far short of demand. Tariffs set at levels too
low to permit full cost recovery and limited government subsidies similarly
result in poor operational performance. Finally, cities that have invested in
sewerage networks often face difculties in promoting the services thus
provided to potential customers, this resulting in low sewerage volumes and
hence revenues that fall short of operation and maintenance costs.
Because of the economies of scale inherent in urban areas, provision
of water infrastructure is more cost-effective there than it is in less densely
populated areas. This presents megacities with signicant opportunities
for expanding service coverage. Conversely, achieving protability in less
densely populated areas is more difcult, this translating into suboptimal
service networks in peri-urban and rural areas.
However, service provision in megacities presents providers with special
challenges, such as the need for an approach to service provision that
reects a particular areas relative degree of urbanization, as well as the age
and income level of its population. While socially unpalatable, differentials in
service level invariably reect income differences among the various districts
of single megacities.
How Cities Can Become More Efcient
and Responsible
Flexible and Nimble Approaches Are Best
In todays megacities, it is rarely possible to lay water supply mains or
sewerage connections in the same manner in which it was done when
the cities of the now-developed world were rst emerging as urban
agglomerations. This is mainly due to a lack of funding for such major works,
as the price premiums that typically apply to remaining empty plots of land
within megacities limit the scope for developing low-value services such
as water infrastructure. Furthermore, the low average elevation of many of
the regions megacities limits the deep-trench excavation necessary for
laying large-diameter mains.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 237
Ultimately, cities must adopt a exible approach to addressing the
water supply challenges they face. In some cases, large schemes are the
most efcient when economies of scale are sufcient to ensure appropriate
economic returns. Conversely, when appropriate, decentralized wastewater
collection and treatment systems can provide excellent investor returns,
given that their specications are correct and they are properly located.
Generally speaking, what works best is often a combination of large-
scale infrastructure and smaller-scale decentralized systems, given that
the overall criterion used in deciding which type of system to build is
efciency. For example, rapidly reducing high rates of water loss yields
an immediate payback through improved water security and savings that
can be used to nance service expansion to yet-underserved areas. In
this regard, rigorous analysis can help minimize system inefciencies and
optimize the manner in which equipment, control systems, and assets are
managed, this in many cases allowing signicant improvements in service
delivery or coverage area.
The above notwithstanding, the current water-security status of many
of the regions cities is hazardous. Thus, the challenges in delivering basic
services to the populations of these cities are both signicant and expanding,
while at the same time, the nancial resources for addressing these challenges
are constrained. As a result, it is unlikely that service standards can be
raised uniformly across a particular city in a simultaneous manner. Thus,
some areas or districts will likely lag others in receiving service upgrades.
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238 Green Cities
Given this, the most efcient approach is for utility and city planners to rank
all possible water supply and sanitation projects in descending order of
desirability according to transparently stated criteria. However, it is far easier
for utility and city planners to defend this ranking to stakeholders if all of the
latter were included in the process of its formulation. In addressing this and
similar water supplyrelated issues, it must be remembered that all users
paying or otherwisemust necessarily be included in decisions regarding
the provision of water-supply services.
This necessity is illustrated by the experience of the city of Brisbane,
Australia during its previous period of severe drought, which in the end
impacted all of southeast Queensland. In addressing the drought, a range of
responses was deployed, including a call for a dramatic voluntary reduction
in consumption levels that linked conservation and responsible consumption
with healthy waterways and, in particular, the citys main river and bay. In the
end, this approach was particularly successful in decreasing water usage,
as daily per-capita consumption levels dropped from 293 liters in 2001 and
2002 to well below 200 liters at the peak of the drought in 2007. This result
was achieved despite there being no signicant sanction levied against
errant consumers. Further, the end of the drought in 2008 did not cause a
return to pre-drought water consumption levels.
The example above demonstrates that water can never be considered
in isolation of other aspects of urban development. That said, doing so is
precisely how many cities attempt to manage their water services, their
declining levels in water security status demonstrating the inefciency of
this approach. While conservation and promoting healthy waterways can
achieve impressive results, this approach works best in cities that already
enjoy good service, credible management of water resources, effective city
management, and, most important of all, access to appropriate funding.
Nonetheless, these solutions will work for cities in developing countries,
given that the basic approach to management of the water resource is to
improve efciency and to ultimately make access to wastewater treatment
and sanitation facilities universal; and given also that decision makers
and private sector investors ultimately make appropriate levels of funding
available for such activities.
In the context of the above, efciency means determining which
interventions deliver the greatest amount of benets per dollar expended,
and then ranking all possible interventions in descending order according
to this criterion. The fact that many decisions relating to water supply are
not grounded in such analysis often causes a politically popular drive for
supply-side interventions and new infrastructure that crowds out simpler,
more exible, yet more effective demand-side interventions.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 239
Use Less, Do More
Asias urban population is expanding at an alarming rate. As population
growth and urbanization rates rise and global climate-change pressures
continue, stress on the regions water resources intensies. Under such
a scenario, continuing to employ current water management practices
will inevitably cause the regions cities to experience future water-supply
difculties. Addressing these challenges efciently thus requires a shift to a
more integrated approach to urban water management.
On the supply side, there is in general little room for nding and
extracting more water, since the water resource is, in the end, nite. Thus,
achieving water security in the regions water-scarce areas (e.g., the
northern parts of the PRC, south and northwest India, and Pakistan) will
in all likelihood require a combination of reductions in consumption levels,
improving production efciencies, and, possibly, importing water through
appropriate trade arrangements. For the regions lower-income areas (e.g.,
Bangladesh, Cambodia, north and northeast India, Nepal, Lao Peoples
Democratic Republic, Myanmar, and Viet Nam), supply-side infrastructure
may be improved, given appropriate levels of new investment.
In most cases, the most efcient solutions will likely be found on the
demand side. Demand-management studies conducted at the global
level illustrate that the level of impact per dollar expended is greatest on
the demand side for a wide range of measures, whether undertaken in the
agriculture sector, industrial sector, or municipal water-use sector.
Reducing Losses
One of the major challenges facing many water utilities is high levels of loss
in water distribution networks, since meeting consumer demand is difcult
when a large proportion of water supplied is lost. In this regard, non-revenue
water (NRW) is dened as the difference between the amount of water put
into the distribution system and the amount of water delivered to registered
customers.
NRW is an excellent performance indicator for water supply systems,
with high levels of NRW indicating poorly managed systems. Successful
water supply systems continuously address NRW by controlling losses,
ensuring customer meter accuracy, and containing the number of illegal
connections. Furthermore, such measures increase protability and thus
can make reinvestment and productivity improvement possible.
240 Green Cities
For many cities in the developing world, reducing NRW should be the rst
option in addressing low levels of service coverage and increased demand
for piped water, since expanding water supply networks without addressing
water losses only leads to increasing waste and inefciency. Transporting
water through distribution networks and treatment facilities requires energy,
the losses of the latter incurred by service providers roughly paralleling NRW
levels (ADB 2010b).
Box 5.2 Non-Revenue Water in Manila
A former government agency, Manilas Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage
System (MWSS), was privatized in 1997. Manila Water, Inc. was subsequently
awarded the east zone concession, while Maynilad Water, Inc. was awarded
the west zone concession. Manila Water provides quality water and wastewater
services to more than 6.1 million people, while Maynilad Water delivers safe,
reliable, and affordable water to more than 7.2 million people.
Prior to privatization, non-revenue water (NRW) system losses totaled 63% of all
water entering the system, while only 58% of the citys population had access to
piped water and only 25% enjoyed 24-hour service. As a result, most residents
resorted to buying water at P150 per cubic meter, which was 50 times the
price of piped water at the time. Other residents resorted to illegal connections
with poor water quality, which led to a relatively high incidence of waterborne
diseases including diarrhea.
Upon privatization, Manila Water began rehabilitating aging pipelines and
installing new ones, a process that included replacement of both residential
and commercial lines on a massive scale. By 2011, Manila Water has replaced
and laid a total of 3,400 kilometers of pipelines.
During the 12 years following privatization, Manila Water doubled the population
it served, improved average water availability from 16 hours per day to 24 hours,
and served more than 6.1 million customers, including some located in the
outlying areas of Rizal and Antipolo City. Furthermore, NRW was reduced from
63% in 1997 to 14% in 2010, which is a level better than that achieved by most
Asian city utilities and which compares well with peak-performing utilities in
developed countries.
The other concessionaire, Maynilad Water Services, Inc., has also similarly
reduced NRW levels by 24 percentage points, from 66% in 2006 to 42% in 2011
(www.adb.org/water).
Sources: Fernando, Irene V. 2011. Achieving Water Efciency. Manila Bulletin, 2 May 2011;
Water Loss 2012 Conference. Manila Water and Maynilad.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 241
Saving Energy
Approximately 2%3% of total global energy consumption is used for
providing water services, including pumping and treating water for urban
household and industrial users, and providing drainage and sewerage
services. Because the level of energy efciency of most water systems
worldwide is low, energy usage by these users can be reduced by signicant
margins through the adoption of cost-effective efciency measures.
A survey of 40 water utilities in Asia and the Pacic estimated that the
share of energy in the total cost of supplying water to users ranged from
3% to 46%. In absolute terms in 2005, this equaled $0.002 to $0.12 per
cubic meter. This cost represents a monetary loss proportionate to the each
systems NRW level (Databook of Southeast Asian Water Utilities 2005).
Box 5.3 Saving Energy in India
The Alliance to Save Energy project in Karnataka, India demonstrated that low-
cost operation measures undertaken by participating utilities accounted for
15%20% of energy and cost savings. The measures under this initiative included
surrendering excess contracted electric demand, maintaining a desirable power
factor for electrical equipment, improving water flow distribution, rescheduling
pump operations, and improving pumping efficiencies. Measures requiring
a significant capital investment included replacing pipelines and impellers,
installing energy-efficient motors, and replacing old inefficient pumps with
energy-efficient pumps that were better integrated into the overall system.
Source: Watergy Case Study, Karnataka, India, Watergy and Alliance to Save Energy.
Promoting Wastewater Management
One of the most signicant challenges cities face is the lack of adequate
sanitation facilities and wastewater management services. Despite the
focus of the sanitation component of the MDGs and the progress achieved
to date, the number of people who lack access to improved sanitation
facilities is staggering, with wide disparities occurring between the rich and
the poor, and rural and urban areas. As a citys population and economic
base grows, the scale of the challenge of addressing the increasing pollution
levels caused by poor sanitation and wastewater discharge increases.
242 Green Cities
In many cities of the developing world, quality and sustainability of
sanitation facilities and adequate treatment of wastewater remain important
issues. Currently, investments in sanitation and wastewater facilities fall far
short of the amount required. This is in general due to long-standing taboos,
low levels of public awareness concerning the social and economic impacts
of pollution from inadequate facilities, and lack of knowledge of the menu
of solutions available for addressing such challenges. Similarly, the fact that
the nancial returns to sanitation investments are often poorly specied,
coupled with an overall inability to scale up sanitation interventions in
tandem with growth of the population and economic base, as well as an
overall lack of access to appropriate nance arrangements have all resulted
in low budgetary priority being assigned to sanitation and wastewater
investments. Such obstacles to understanding the long-term viability of
such investments cause policy makers to see them as a nancial dead end
in that their perceived costs are high, and their returns are seen as being
negligible at best to zero at worst. Thus, achieving water security for the
regions cities will require a major change in the way policy makers perceive
investments in wastewater management. This change in perception could be
further facilitated by innovations in both wastewater treatment technology,
and in the nancing and delivery mechanisms that make these system cost-
effective, nancially viable, and environmentally sound.
That said, initiatives have already been undertaken that demonstrate that
improved sanitation and, in particular, improved wastewater management
and reuse can contribute to achieving energy, food, and water security.
Examples include harvesting nutrients for use in fertilizers, producing
methane and biogas for energy and carbon credits, and treating wastewater
that can be used for irrigation, electricity generation, cooling, industrial, and
other non-potable uses. All of these offer income-generating opportunities
that prove that rather than being an investment dead end, sanitation can be
a nancially viable undertaking. Two projects, one in Viet Nam and the other
in the Kyrgyz Republic, illustrate how innovative nancing in this regard can
be used to ensure sustainability and inclusiveness (Boxes 5.4 and 5.5). Both
projects produced signicant health, environmental, and economic benets,
and directly contributed to poverty reduction.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 243
Box 5.5 Protecting Lakes while Aiding the Poor
Not only is the poverty level of Issyk Kul considered to be high, extremely poor
residents comprise 9% of the total population. However, under the project,
more than 123,000 people constructed on-site sanitation facilities, and another
45,000 became connected to the sewerage system. This project also delivered
environmental benefits to the entire Issyk-Kul Lake region. Ultimately, the
women of the region were particularly keen to see the improvements under the
project materialize, as they and their families had previously suffered from both
waterborne disease and the inherent lack of dignity associated with substandard
sanitation conditions. A number of vehicles for ensuring successful upgrading of
the utility were introduced into project implementation, such as performance-
based service contracts that incorporated targets, incentives, and penalties, all
of which encouraged output-based achievements.
Source: V. Padmanabhan. 2009. Kyrgyz Republic: Issyk-Kul Sustainable Development Project.
Powerpoint presentation for the World Toilet Summit and Expo 2009. Singapore. 24 December.
Box 5.4 Ensuring that Services Reach the Poor
Completed in April 2011, Viet Nams Central Region Urban Environmental
Improvement Project (CRUEIP) improved living conditions in six medium-sized
coastal towns in the central part of the country. Representing only 1% of the
total project cost, the entire community awareness program of the Household
Sanitation Credit Scheme was supervised by Community Management
Committees (CMC). Each of the projects beneficiary towns formed a CMC,
the membership of which was largely drawn from the local chapter of the Viet
Nam Womens Union. While project funds were used to provide start-up capital
for the Household Sanitation Credit Scheme that operated as a revolving fund,
the CMCs themselves formulated the loan and repayment conditions under the
initiative and likewise defined loan eligibility criteria.
By the end of the project, approximately 2,230 houses in the CRUEIP towns had
constructed new latrines and septic tanks as compared with a target of 1,220,
with three-fourths of all credit recipients being women. Further, operation of the
revolving fund operation is expected to continue project completion.
Source: ADB. Forthcoming. Project Brief: Household Sanitation Credit Scheme in Central Viet Nam.
Manila.
Making Technology Count
To date, neither the full potential of emerging technology nor the strengths
of the private sector have been exploited in addressing the challenges cities
face in the water supply and sanitation sectors.
244 Green Cities
The water sector is largely conservative. It is thus reluctant to change and
slow to adopt new technologies. Unfortunately, it is precisely these interventions
that facilitate achievement of energy balance for the sector. The landscape
for technology development and nance that might underwrite initiatives for
improving the efciency and cost-effectiveness of the sector could best be
described as being sterile. It is little wonder that the sector is perceived to be an
unattractive venue for entrepreneurial endeavor and investment.
Awakening the sector and the decision makers that drive its behavior
to its potential for technological development and innovation is thus vital to
achieving water security for the regions cities. In this regard, the megacities
of the region represent a potential critical mass for driving such technological
development and innovation, which is an opportunity that has not been
lost on a few of the regions large cities including Singapore. Because this
awakening is only beginning, care must be taken to avoid solutions that are
expensive in terms of benets delivered per dollar expended, in that such
investments only deliver marginal benets.
Nevertheless, the number of initiatives available to city utilities wishing to
improve cost-effectiveness and thence nancial performance is relatively large
and growing. However, rather than attempting to address the entire range of
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 245
Box 5.6 Technology for Change
Given the regions burgeoning demand for water, its limited freshwater
resources, and the considerable socioeconomic and environmental costs of
poor sanitation, proper wastewater management is critical to achieving water
security for the region. This can most easily be accomplished by migrating from
both high-energy-intensity forms of treatmentor alternatively, no treatment
at allto affordable and achievable forms of wastewater treatment that treat
wastewater as a resource that can potentially produce competitive rates of
financial return.
Ultimately, wastewater reuse expands the regions supply of freshwater.
Furthermore, by lowering the energy intensity of wastewater treatment,
investment in the sector can be stimulated, since it is the sectors current high
level of energy intensity that in part discourages much-needed investment. This
can best be accomplished by making wastewater treatment a source of both
energy and income. Biogas digesters connected to sanitation facilities in rural
areas in Cambodia, the Peoples Republic of China (PRC), India, Nepal, and
Viet Nam produce cheap energy that can be used for lighting and cooking.
In addition, methane capture in wastewater treatment facilities not only
contributes to climate change mitigation but also generates carbon credits and
a renewable energy source for use by these facilities, as well as residents of
nearby communities.
An emerging critical issue concerns sludge treatment and reuse. An excellent
operational example of this change in perception and practice is the
decentralized sludge treatment facilities at Wuhan, PRC. Harvesting of nutrients
and biosolids that can be used as fertilizers contributes to food security. Biosolids
(by-products of wastewater treatment) can be treated in a manner that makes
them safe to use as organic soil conditioners. Applying biosolids and urine thus
treated as fertilizers helps reduce the use of chemical fertilizers, the production
of which is likewise energy-intensive. Similarly, safe fertilizer produced from
ecosan toilets has turned some farmers into entrepreneurs.
Further, in the face of increasing climate variability, reusing water as a means
of reducing demand placed on existing freshwater resources is an attractive
alternative. For example, in Dak Lak Province, Viet Nam, 5,500 households are
connected to a wastewater treatment facility, the output of which is used to
irrigate agricultural land of more than 100 hectares.
Similarly, many local governments are turning to decentralized wastewater
treatment systems as a means of improving water quality in both peri-urban
and coastal poor communities, as well as that provided to public markets and
hospitals. Treated wastewater from these systems is used for flushing toilets,
watering plants, street cleaning, and even fighting fires, all of these uses
collectively resulting in substantial savings in monthly water bills. Similarly,
the constructed wetlands in Ningbo, PRC; the reed beds of Bayawan City,
Philippines; and the constructed duckweed systems in Bangladesh and India
all provide low-cost, low-energy, and productive treatment of wastewater.
continued on next page
246 Green Cities
technologies and solutions that might be adopted by decision makers here,
the discussion in this section is restricted to what many in the sector see as
its most problematic segment, which is wastewater management. Possible
solutions and responses to the issues presented by this subsector are
therefore highlighted in the paragraphs that immediately follow.
A range of opportunities exists that would allow cities to see wastewater
as a nancially viable investment rather than as a nuisance. For example,
storm water run-off can be collected, and following some form of treatment,
redeployed by a wide range of end users. Similarly, nutrient capture from
domestic and trade waste is emerging as a protable activity. Ultimately, all
of what were once considered to be nuisance by-products of wastewater
can have value, once they are treated in a way that permits their reuse.
How Cities Can Show Leadership and Drive Change
Responsible and Robust Water Management
The multiple uses of, and demand for, freshwater by the regions cities
puts signicant pressure on its freshwater sources. In this regard, the
International Development Association notes that while world population
tripled in the 20th century, the use of water increased six-fold (IDA 2007).
Population growth increases the demand for water in two ways: through
Box 5.6 continued
Treated wastewater can likewise be sold to generate revenue. For example, in
Surat, India, domestic wastewater will be treated and sold for industrial use by
a concessionaire, once the contract for this activity has been awarded. While
the total cost of the wastewater treatment facility (with a capacity of 40 million
liters per day) to be operated by this concessionaire is estimated at $15 million,
treated water sales are expected to generate revenues of $6 million annually.
Finally, the wastewater treatment system of the Nusa Dua hotel complex in Bali,
Indonesia not only provides water for the hotels gardens and golf course but is itself
a mini-ecosystem that attracts recreational-fishing and bird-watching enthusiasts,
and tourists, all of which generate additional revenues for the hotel complex.
Sources: M. C. M. Ebarvia and A. Chiplunkar. 2012; A. Chiplunkar and M. C. M. Ebarvia. 2010.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 247
increased personal consumption and increased economic activity. Other
threats to water security include pollution and economic activities that
impact watersheds such as logging and mining. Ensuring water security for
the region thus demands immediate improvements in the way the water
resource is managed. However, there remain signicant shortcomings in its
management, including lack of coordination of initiatives for improving water
management itself.
Understanding the relationship between management of the aquatic
ecosystem and the resources derived from it is a precondition to sustainably
conserving, managing, and using the regions water resource. In the view
of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), this link
between management and conservation extends beyond merely managing
water as it exists in-stream. Instead, it extends to broader ecological issues
such as the health of the land and the ecosystem overall (IUCN 2004).
Appropriate water resource management thus encompasses planning,
developing, distributing, allocating, and optimizing the use of the water
resource in a way that leads to long-term sustainability.
The ecosystem of which the regions water resource is a part is affected
by changes in human activity and lifestyles that give rise to increases in the
demand placed on it. Rapid expansion of the urban population places ever-
increasing demands on the water resource that in turn derive from increased
demand for additional food, water, living space, jobs, industries, transport,
and other amenities of urban life. This forces the ecosystem to provide water
to meet these demands from a resource that is nite in supply. As a result,
urbanization impacts the riverine ecosystem in a negative way, such as when
run-off from households, industries, farms, and sanitary landlls carries toxic
materials into the streams that form an integral part of watersheds. The
resulting alterations in the biological composition of the river basin reduce
its ability to provide water free of such toxins, which is precisely the type of
water demanded by the activities that cause these biological alterations in
the rst place.
Ultimately, it is more cost-effective to manage a river basin and its
resources in a sustainable way than it is to reverse damage to it. Emerton and
Bos (2004) note that the cost of conserving an upstream forest is less than
investing in new water ltration and treatment plants in cities, or undertaking
de-siltation activities when the upstream forest is no longer capable of
providing such services. Furthermore, the increasing demand placed on
the water resource from rapid expansion of the urban population similarly
increases the necessity of properly conserving and managing the nite water
resource, if the water-related requirements of rapid urban population growth
are to be met in a sustainable way. Just as with any other natural resource,
river basins require time to renew, reproduce, and rejuvenate themselves.
248 Green Cities
As a result, proper management of riverine ecosystems could correctly
be viewed as a precondition to sustained urban growth and economic
advance.
The Role of the City in Water Management
Because of the alarming rate at which the regions urban population is
expanding and the demands that this expansion places on the regions
water resource, cities have an important role to play in its sustainable
management. In short, it is the responsibility of city administrations
to conserve water, minimize its wasteful use, and ensure its equitable
distribution through integrated water resource management. This requires
development of a comprehensive water resource database and making the
information it contains available to the public at large. Initiatives for improving
management of the water resource should initially focus on improving the
efciency of water use in areas that have exploited the water resource in
an unsustainable way. Promoting water resource management at the level
of the river basin is key in this regard, as is promoting conservation by
all users of water. Such initiatives are the core elements of Indias water
reform agenda that is expected to deliver signicant improvements in water
resource management over the coming 10 years.
Some countries have responded to their previous unsustainable use of
the water resource in a responsible way, an excellent example of this being
the Republic of Koreas Four Rivers Restoration Project which is to use
green engineering interventions to restore the health of rivers, improve water
quality, alleviate ooding, increase storage capacity, and better regulate
the ow of the rivers that will be rehabilitated under the project. A major
objective of the project is to provide adequate, reliable supplies of water for
municipal, industrial, and agricultural uses. The initiative thus approaches
management of the water resource from the perspective of rehabilitation
of entire riverine ecological systems for the purpose of ensuring sustained
economic advance in the areas that draw upon these systems.
Similarly, as part of its long-term community plan (Living in Brisbane
2026), the Brisbane City Council in Australia stated its environmental goals
as a healthy river and bay, thus emphasizing the important role that a
healthy overall ecosystem plays in sustainable urban development. Further,
the city council circumscribed the responsibility of each individual and
agency in maintaining the health of the citys overall ecosystem. Placed
on the citys ofcial website to ensure the widest possible access by the
public, the overall plan included specic projects, programs, and initiatives
for ensuring a healthy ecosystem that included storm water management,
erosion and sediment control, and overall health of the citys waterways
(Brisbane City Council 2006). In some cases, achieving or maintaining water
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 249
security requires making unpopular decisions. For example, dams and
reservoirs are sometimes required for ensuring a reliable supply of water
to urban areas to counterbalance shortages that occur due to variations
or changes in hydrologic cycles. While over the past 20 years, a signicant
amount of opposition to dams has been voiced, if properly planned,
designed, constructed, and maintained, dams can provide water security
to expanding urban areas. Without the farsighted decisions regarding water
security made many decades ago, many of todays cities would not have
enjoyed growth in the urban amenities they now offer. Thus to some extent,
the inactivity in building new dams and reservoirs that has occurred in recent
years could constrain future urban growth. This is an important factor for
the regions urban policy makers to consider, given current urban-growth
projections that forecast more than half of the regions population living in
cities only a few decades from now.
The Importance of Effective Leadership and
Good Governance
In large measure, the regions current state of water insecurity has resulted
from poor management, political interference, and a general misunderstanding
of what is required to improve water service delivery. In contrast, inspired
leaders who champion appropriate reforms, mobilize resources, and involve
communities in managing water resource can help address many of the
regions challenges to achieve water security.
In short, what the water sector requires for achieving water security is
not just more nancing. It instead requires better management. Fortunately,
the region already has some farsighted leaders and groups who have
achieved extraordinary success in water service delivery and can help
inspire improvements in management of the regions water resource. Among
them is Ek Sonn Chan, Director of Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority
(PPWSA) in Cambodia, who correctly identied the changes required for
his organization to operate effectively as a public water service provider.
7
He initiated a culture of change that began with improving staff skills and
then stressed the value of good performance in service delivery. Eventually,
the reforms he initiated in both PPWSAs organizational structure and
operations resulted in 100% water service coverage in Phnom Penhs inner
city, reduction of non-revenue water from 90% in 1993 to 8% in 2007, and a
bill collection rate of 99.9%.
7
In 1996, the Government of Cambodia granted PPWSA administrative and nancial
autonomy. This allowed PPWSA to operate as independently as would a private corporation.
250 Green Cities
Others include Bindeshwar Pathak, the founder of the Sulabh International
Social Services Organization, a nongovernment group that since 1970 has
installed low-cost and ecologically sustainable toilets in more than 1.2 million
homes in India. Similarly, Khun Chamroon Suavdee, a restaurant owner who
chairs the Bang Pakong River Basin Committee in Thailand, has helped
resolve community conicts over water use. Such champions can make a
citys water service function far more efciently than previously. In the absence
Box 5.7 Instituting a Culture of Change in Phnom Penh
In 1993, the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority (PPWSA) was heavily
subsidized by Cambodias national government. Total annual income was
only KR0.7 billion, against operating costs of KR1.4 billion. The agencys more
than 500 staff drew an average monthly salary of KR50,000 ($20), while upper
management operated PPWSA in a way that served their own interests. Staff
members were generally underqualified, underpaid, demoralized, inefficient,
and lacking discipline.
As a first step in improving water service delivery, PPWSA began a culture of
change through educating, motivating, and disciplining both PPWSA staff and
the public at large. PPWSA was restructured in a way that gave upper-level
management more responsibility, promoted a superior work ethic among line
staff, rewarded good performance with increased salary and other benefits,
and fostered teamwork.
Next, PPWSAs revenue stream was expanded. It achieved this through five
initiatives. First, PPWSA ensured that water meters were installed for all
connections. This significantly improved monitoring of water use. Second, it
ended illegal connections by providing rewards in exchange for information
concerning illegal connections and imposing penalties for their use.
Furthermore, staff suspected of illegal activities in this regard were investigated
and dismissed if found guilty. Third, consumer files were computerized,
updated, revised, and improved, which significantly improved bill collection.
Fourth, PPWSA embarked on a public education program that stressed the
importance of paying ones water bills, particularly high-ranking officials, thus
making the latter role models for the public at large in this regard. Finally, in
both 1997 and 2001, PPWSA increased water tariffs sufficiently to ensure that
its operating costs were recovered. While a three-step increase was initially
planned, following the 2001 tariff increase, PPWSA was able to recover its entire
operating cost. Thus, a third increase was unnecessary.
In addition to the improvements described above, PPWSA played an important
role in poverty alleviation in that by 2002 it had completed 3,046 household
connections in Phnom Penhs 31 poorest communities, thus lessening the
financial burden of poor families that formerly had no alternative but to buy
water from resellers at rates significantly above those charged by PPWSA.
Source: A. C. MacIntosh. 2003. Asian Water Supplies Reaching the Urban Poor. Asian Development
Bank. August.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 251
of such leaders and appropriate political support, the changes required for
achieving water security for the region cannot occur (ADB 2008).
As it relates to the water resource, good governance is equated with
appropriate management, which in turn requires both effective leadership
and political will. Similarly, participation by all stakeholders, transparency,
predictability, and accountability are pillars of good governance as it relates
to the provision of freshwater.
Adopted in 2001, ADBs Water for All policy outlines the legal and
regulatory systems required for ensuring that water service providers and
resource managers are held accountable by law for their performance as
measured against prescribed standards (ADB 2001). A key element of
the Water for All policy is participation by all stakeholders including the
public at large, the private sector, local communities, and nongovernment
organizations.
Ultimately, certainty in the water sector depends on consistent
application of laws, regulations, and policies that regulate activities in the
sector. Likewise, transparency requires timely availability of information about
water policies and projects to the general public, as well as clarity regarding
rules, regulations, and operational decisions that impact all consumers
(ADB 2010a). Because the manner in which this policy is implemented in a
particular city requires adaptation and modication in a way that serves its
particular requirements, opportunities, and constraints, its implementation
should occur in the absence of any preconceived dogma or hidden agenda.
In the context of water security, good governance has best been
achieved through a readiness and capacity to address vulnerability. This
unfortunately contrasts with the behavior of many regions and cities that
face signicant challenges requiring urgent action but that have limited
willingness or capacity to respond to such challenges.
Starting Big: Resuscitating an Entire River
Rapid population growth and economic advance both challenge the
sustainability of riverine ecosystems. Yet, the benets of rapid economic
advance that these ecosystems facilitate are not distributed equally across
the worlds population. The 1998 Human Development Report points out
that 20% of the population of developed countries consumes 86% of the
worlds goods. In contrast, more than 1 billion people have no access to safe
drinking water (Shah 2005, Donzier 2007), 2.6 billion people have no access
to basic sanitation facilities (Donzier 2007), and 85% of anthropogenic
pollution is discharged into inland, coastal, and marine natural environments
without any treatment (Donzier 2007). In both urban and rural areas, the
poor are most affected by these circumstances. In short, their limited access
252 Green Cities
to safe water and basic sanitation services, along with the higher levels of
pollution of all types that they are exposed to cause them to suffer health-
related, social, and economic hardships that higher-income segments of the
global population are able to avoid.
Management, conservation, and preservation of river-basin resources
are all necessary to meet both the current and future requirements of the
human population, if economic advance is to continue. This in turn requires
addressing issues relating to access to safe water and basic sanitation
facilities, and minimizing pollution. Addressing these issues begins with
management of water resources in a comprehensive and integrated way
that includes planning for optimum use of water resources in accordance
with existing water policies and regulations.
Integrated river basin management (IRBM) incorporates all of these
management principles in a way that ensures sustainability of these vital
ecosystems.
8
In particular, IRBM coordinates conservation, management,
and development of water, land, and related resources across sectors
in a way that maximizes the economic and social benets derived from
water use, while preserving and, where necessary, restoring freshwater
ecosystems (Global Water Partnership 2000). Such actions are of particular
importance since freshwater systems account for most of the worlds water
supply (Mahabir 2004).
Successful IRBM initiatives support the long-term sustainability of
particular river basins by involving all members of local communities that
use the resources these basins provide. Such community participation
forges partnerships between the government and the community that meet
the objectives of both, while simultaneously sustaining development and
maintenance of healthy river basins.
Much is made of the need for leadership, good governance, and decisive
long-term action under well-thought out planning regimes such as integrated
water resources management and IRBM. However, framing effective
responses to environmental challenges at the city level requires addressing
unique challenges and taking advantage of the enabling conditions
that a particular environmental issue presents. Furthermore, successful
implementation of any such initiative requires a serious commitment on the
part of stakeholders, regardless of the fact that achieving this can be a time-
consuming and complex process. An example drawn from the Philippines
experience highlights the importance to smooth project implementation of
achieving such a commitment.
8
IRBM is under the scope of integrated water resources management (IWRM). Simply put,
IRBM is IWRM performed at the level of the river basin.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 253
Box 5.8 Suzhou Creek Rehabilitation Project
Wastewater discharge from industrial production, increasing water
consumption by the urban population, and the consequent generation of
municipal wastewater created serious water pollution problems for most cities
in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). Shanghais Suzhou Creek, which is
an important waterway that passes through the heart of the city, was once
called black and stink, as it was a repository for wastewater discharge from
industrial, commercial, and residential areas. The most severely polluted river
in the city, Suzhou Creek then stood for environmental degradation, pollution of
water resources, and public health hazards.
In 1999, the Suzhou Creek Rehabilitation Project began improving the creeks
water quality by strengthening management of this important resource,
improving flood control, and upgrading the health standards and quality of
life of nearby residents. This project was initiated under the governments
Ninth Five-Year Plan (19962000) that emphasized sustainable development,
coordinated planning, and environmental protection, the latter in particular
including protection of the urban environment through establishing wastewater
treatment facilities and managing solid waste.
continued on next page
Suzhou Creeks embankments have been transformed into pleasant residential neighborhoods and
ecological parks.
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254 Green Cities
Box 5.8 continued
With the support of the Shanghai Suzhou Creek Rehabilitation and Construction
Company, the projects design incorporated a number of important innovations.
For example, as part of the projects embankment reconstruction component,
upgrading of Meng Qing Garden included a landscaped leisure and recreational
area, an equalization basin that used an underground storage tank to store
excess rainwater, and a base for environmental education that focused on
water resources and used the gardens ponds and streams to demonstrate the
self-purification mechanisms of natural water courses.
Similarly, the Jingan garbage transfer station was one part of a project
component that removed and relocated night soil and solid waste collection
wharves that were formerly located in a residential area of Shanghais city
center. A semi-underground facility, the station has aboveground facilities that
include a landscaped garden, a visitor center, and an operations control room.
To minimize the stations adverse environmental and social impacts, various
innovative measures, such as odor control and ventilation systems, were
introduced into the design of garbage collection trucks and compactor systems.
As part of the project, the Shanghai municipal government committed itself to
achieving the long-term goal of water quality improvement in Suzhou Creek
through implementation of a 12-year program (19982010). By the end of
project implementation in 2010, the black and malodorous appearance of the
creeks main tributaries had disappeared, a waterfront landscape corridor had
been completed, and the water quality of the creeks urban reach had steadily
improved up to a Class V standard. These improvements facilitated construction
of a waterside housing development along the creek.
Ultimately, it was the governments political commitment and management
capability that allowed successful implementation of this project, since in the
end, large-scale urban resettlement initiatives were required to ensure smooth
project implementation. One of the important benefits of the project was that
it provided an excellent example of environmental improvement in a large and
densely populated urban center.
Source: ADB. 2005. Suzhou Creek Rehabilitation Project in the Peoples Republic of China. Project
Completion Report. Manila.
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 255
A Pasig River cleaner
Box 5.9 Cleaning Up the Pasig River
One of the most important natural waterways in the Philippines, the Pasig River,
flows through the heart of the Philippines national capital region. While its total
length is only 27 kilometers, the Pasig River is the only link between two large
and equally important bodies of water, Manila Bay and Laguna de Bay. It is also
heavily polluted.
In the 1990s, through technical assistance provided by the Danish International
Development Agency, the Philippines Department of Environment and Natural
Resources implemented the Pasig River Rehabilitation Program, a 15-year
multiproject, multisector program with the objective of upgrading the rivers
water quality to the Class C level, as well as improving the general condition of
its riverbanks and thence the quality of life of the households that live along it.
In 1999, the Pasig River Rehabilitation Commission (PRRC) was created for the
purpose of harmonizing the plans of various agencies and sectors for improving
the river, and for consolidating efforts in improving its water quality. This initiative
built on the work of the previous river rehabilitation program.
From 2000 to 2008, the primary initiatives of the commission included
reducing the volume of garbage dumped into the river and industrial waste
discharged into it, together with resettlement of informal settlers to upgraded
housing units, dredging, and development of the riverbanks into environmental
preservation areas.
continued on next page
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256 Green Cities
Box 5.9 continued
According to PRRC, these interventions improved the condition of the Pasig
River. By 2010, approximately two-thirds of the left and right banks of the Pasig
River had been developed into environmental preservation areas, or a total of
25 kilometers. Solid waste pollution load was reduced from 10% in the 1990s to
5% in 2000. Similarly, the industrial waste pollution load was reduced from 45% to
35%, which facilitated subsequent improvements in riverine biodiversity. What
remained to be addressed was the issue of domestic wastewater pollution, the
loadings of which swelled from 45% to 60% during 20002008. The source of
this problem was that more than 90% of Manilas households were not serviced
by proper sanitation and wastewater treatment facilities. To address this issue,
and thus to significantly reduce the domestic pollution load of both the Pasig
River and its tributaries, government agencies began working with Metro
Manilas two private-sector water service providers. The challenge faced in this
regard was to fast-track construction of sewerage systems and wastewater and
septage treatment facilities as a means to increase coverage to the river basins
entire population (Tablan and Mallari. 2009. Targets, Strategies, Good Practices,
Achievements and Challenges in Reducing Pollution in the Pasig River. Paper
presented at the East Asian Seas Congress 2009, Manila).
From the discussions during the Pasig River Forum (held on 24 April 2012 at
ADB), the following are the major lessons learned from the initiatives for
rehabilitating the Pasig River over the past 20 years:
The commitment of political leaders to the objectives of an initiative is
fundamental to its success, since this requires the government assigning
budgetary priority to the initiative to ensure adequate funding.
Public awareness of the importance of proper waste management and
its health and economic benefits is key to ensuring ongoing support for
environmental improvement initiatives.
Stakeholder support is likewise critical to environment improvement
initiatives, particularly in the context of safeguarding infrastructure
constructed under such initiatives.
Widespread support for change in the conditions that negatively impact
a community prior to undertaking an environmental improvement
initiative vastly improves institutional accountability, as well as planning,
project design, implementation, oversight, monitoring, and enforcement
capacities. Working together with local communities and partnering with
the private sector further magnify these beneficial impacts.
Partnerships with investors and the private sector at large in implementing
wastewater and solid waste management initiatives are a financing
opportunity that is often overlooked. This is unfortunate because
such partnerships have numerous spin-off benefits for environmental
improvement, such as improved housing, and expanded livelihood and
income opportunities for lower-income households.
continued on next page
Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 257
Box 5.9 continued
Ensuring that the initiatives accomplishments are as visible as possible is an
important factor in convincing local residents and businesses that change
is possible. Furthermore, public exposure to the outputs of environmental
initiatives often significantly increases public support and participation.
In rehabilitating rivers such as the Pasig, water conservation has many benefits
in addition to reducing stress on existing water delivery infrastructure.
Lower volumes of water flowing into city sewer systems reduce storm
water overflows into streams and rivers. Small-scale interventions, such
as encouraging the fixing of leaks and using water-efficient faucets and
toilets, can vastly reduce the volume of water consumed. In addition to
saving thousands of liters of water each day, this reduces stress on sewer
and treatment-plant infrastructure.
Finally, every business and individual in a watershed affects a rivers health.
As a result, steps that minimize damage to water quality are within everyones
grasp. Once this awareness penetrates the consciousness of the entire public
at large, other measures initiated tend to enjoy widespread support.
Source: M. C. M. Ebarvia. 2012.
Water Security for Cities of the future
What is now clear is that responding to water shortages by extracting
additional water from nite resources is no longer a viable option. What is
instead required in the face of the regions rapid rates of population growth,
urbanization, and economic advance is a partnership of water users and
managers that is informed by the content of this chapter. Such a partnership
provides an appropriate foundation for interventions that lead to future
water security for the region. For example, successful implementation of
demand-management interventions not only reduces water use, which in
turn produces a greater stream of benets from existing water resources,
but also in some cases avoids or delays costly development of new sources
of freshwater, the latter being an intervention of last resort.
Only through integrated water resource management of river basins
can the return on public investment in water storage, productivity, and
conservation be increased. However, this requires water-management
institutions capable of addressing the challenges of increasing water scarcity
in the face of rapid population growth and urbanization. Such institutions
see these challenges from the perspective of the waterfoodenergy nexus,
258 Green Cities
and thus recognize that even small interventions can vastly improve the
degree of water security a particular city achieves. For example, investing
$1 in comprehensive sanitation facilities that allow toilet-to-river recycling of
water can deliver $8$12 in health and economic benets.
Ultimately, improving and then maintaining the health of the regions river
basins is critical to sustaining its current rapid rate of economic advance.
However, this represents a signicant challenge in that 80% of the regions
rivers are in poor health. Addressing a challenge on such a scale requires
engaging all stakeholders, including the private sector, in restoring the health
of the regions river basins and, with it, water security for the region as a
whole. This includes increasing the level of preparedness for water-related
disasters, regardless of whether these are induced by climate change, as
steps such as investing in ood forecasting and early warning systems are
likewise initiatives that are important to achieving water security.
Ultimately, a Green City is also a blue city; i.e., a city that has secured
its own water future by ensuring sustainable management of its water
resource. While not an easy task, achieving sustainable water security is
fundamental to sustained economic growth and improvement in quality of
life in both the regions urban and rural areas.
Children drink from a public faucet.
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Green Cities: A Water-Secure Future 259
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Asian Development Bank (ADB). 2001. Water for All: The Water Policy of the
Asian Development Bank. Manila.
______. 2005a. Databook of Southeast Asian Water Utilities. Manila.
______ 2005b. Suzhou Creek Rehabilitation Project in the Peoples Republic
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______ 2010a. Improving Water Governance in the Asia-Pacic Region: Why
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Bhanoji, R., and K. E. Seetharam. 2006. Strategic Thinking to Achieve Water
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Chiplunkar, A., and M. C. M. Ebarvia. 2010. Malaysian Water Partnership
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Corcoran, E. C., C. Nellemann, E. Baker, R. Bos, D. Osborn, and H. Savelli,
eds. 2010. Sick Water? The central role of wastewater management
in sustainable development. A Rapid Response Assessment. United
260 Green Cities
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), UN-HABITAT, GRID-Arendal.
www.grida.no
Donzier, J. F. 2007. INBO Recommendations for Better Water Resources
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on Sustainable Water Resources Management and Delta Ecosystem
Maintenance. pp. 2126.
Ebarvia, M. C. M., and A. Chiplunkar. 2012. Environment and Poverty Times.
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Fernando, I. V. 2011. Achieving Water Efciency. Manila Bulletin, 02 May
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Global Water Partnership. 2000. Technical Advisory Background Papers. No. 4.
Hutton, G., and L. Haller. 2004. Evaluation of Costs and Benets of Water
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IUCN. 2004. Water as a Human Right. Environmental Policy and Law Paper.
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Lenton, R., A. M. Wright, and K. Lewis. 2005. Health, Dignity and
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Mahabir, S. 2004. Integrated Water Resource Management in Trinidad and
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Padmanabhan, V. 2009. Kyrgyz Republic: Issyk-Kul Sustainable Development
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Prasad, N. 2007. Social Policies and Water Sector Reform. Markets, Business,
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262
CHAPTER 6
Green City Solid
Waste Management
by Reynar R. Rollan
Introduction
A
s the worlds population continues to grow at a rapid pace, so does
the problem of solid waste management. This reality, along with
its consequent negative environmental impacts, is nowhere more
apparent than in Asian cities. These urban centers are expected to be home
to about 2.7 billion people in 2030 (UN-HABITAT 2007). At a conservatively
estimated daily average per-capita waste generation rate of 1.5 kilograms,
about 4 billion tons of waste per day would be produced in that year. This is
enough to build a 2-meter-high wall of waste of a length equivalent to that of
the Great Wall, or to blanket the entire city of Singapore with a 1-meter-thick
coating of waste in 40 days.
Asian cities generally employ a variety of waste management systems that
are based on available technical and nancial resources, and the current level
of environmental awareness in the city concerned. The system employed by
lower-income urban centers is mainly partial collection, open dumping, partial
recovery of recyclables by the informal sector, limited composting, and some
landlling. Cities in developed countries have greater collection coverage,
utilize landlls for disposal, operate waste-to-energy (WTE) plants, and employ
composting as well as mechanized recovery of recyclable materials (Table 6.1).
Overall, in handling the bulk of waste generated, the systems in the cities of
developing Asia are still anchored in waste collection and disposal. Composting
and recovery of recyclables through mechanized or manual means have not
reached signicant rates of use relative to overall waste generation in these
cities. Open dumping is prevalent, while development of sanitary landlls is
constrained by limited community acceptance of these engineered disposal
facilities. The limited space in most cities likewise prevents development of
more landlls when current disposal facilities reach capacity. Singapores four
mainland landlls reached full capacity in 1999, following which the country
began using its offshore Semakau landll (Oh 2008).
Green City Solid Waste Management 263
Incineration is used in highly developed cities such as Singapore and
Shanghai. Issues such as high cost, perceived negative impacts on the
atmospheric environment, and loss of resources are signicant barriers to
use of this technology in most cities in developing Asia (Visvanathan and
Trankler 2000).
In the countries included in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) grouping, both industrial and ordinary municipal solid wastes are
usually disposed of in open dumps and landlls (UNEP 2004). However, the
methods currently employed for managing the bulk of the waste generated
in Asian cities will not be sufcient to manage the projected volume of waste
that will be generated as a result of rapid rates of population growth and
economic development.
The key to sustainable management of solid waste in these cities lies
in applying the 3R principle (reducereuserecycle principle), as well as
technologies appropriate to achieving acceptable sanitation conditions
and facilitating recovery and use of materials in the various stages of waste
Table 6.1 Amounts of Solid Waste Generated in Selected Asian Cities
(tons per day)
Year City
Waste
Generation Collection Recycling Composting Incineration Disposal
2004 Bangkok
a
9,400 7.500 No data
b
280 20
c
~7,275
2004 Jakarta
d
8,562 6,850 No data 7 22 6,000
f
2005 Dhaka
g, h
4,634 1,946 475
e
15 None 1,946
2006 Beijing
i
16,000 13,615 3,918 740 30 12.845
2007 Calcutta
j
3,000 1,800 300 700 None 1,800
2009 Shanghai
k
19,233 19,233 No data 1,923 3,077 10,193
2009 Singapore
l
16,751 16,751 9.548 No data 6,795 408
2010 Hong Kong
m
23,680 23,680 9,863 No data None 13,817
~ = approximately
a
Muttamara and Leong (2004).
b
Recycling practiced by informal sector has no recorded data.
c
Hospital waste is incinerated in the facility.
d
Pasang, Moore, and Sitorius (2005).
e
Information on quantity not provided, generally limited, and undertaken by the informal sector.
f
Estimate only. About 1,700 tons per day unaccounted for and assumed to be burnt or dumped in
vacant lots or waterways.
g
Japan International Cooperation Agency (2005).
h
Enayetullah and Hashimi (2006).
i
United Nations Environment Programme (2006).
j
Chattopadhyay, Dutta, and Ray (2009).
k
Yoshiro, Friedrich, and Lu (2009).
l
Lim (2010).
m
Environmental Protection Department (2011).
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
264 Green Cities
ow (Ackerman 2005). It is precisely the latter that are envisioned for the
Green Cities of the future. The following sections describe the preferred
ow of waste from the various generators, as well as common methods
and technologies consistent with Green City environmental standards as
implemented in some Asian cities. This includes the features necessary for
sustaining such operations.
Solid Waste Flow in Green Cities
Solid waste management in Green Cities is anchored on avoidance and the
3R principle. These occupy the upper tiers of the solid waste management
hierarchy that serves as a general guide to the various activities in the waste
ow (Figure 6.1). It is based on the composition of waste from various
generators and availability of conventional or new technologies where
practicable.
Open dump with waste picking Scavenging at bins
Open dumping Scavenging of mixed waste at collection vehicles
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Common waste management practices in Asian cities
Green City Solid Waste Management 265
The composition of waste from the various generators is presented in
Table 6.2. The percentage shares of the various components in total waste
generated vary with the level of per-capita income attained by particular
cities or countries. In low-income countries, the bulk of waste generated
corresponds to food and other biodegradable materials (Zerbock 2003;
Visvanathan, Adhikari, and Prem Ananth 2007). Thus, organic matter
makes up more than 50% of the solid waste generated in the ASEAN cities
of Bangkok, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, and Manila (UNEP 2004). The high-
income, industrialized countries have a relatively higher proportion of non-
biodegradable components (ADB 2008). For any city, an updated set of
waste characterization data is necessary for developing an appropriate
solid waste management system. E-waste (e.g., computers, ofce
electronic equipment, mobile phones, television sets, and refrigerators)
has been included in all sources, as generation of these materials has
grown in tandem with the increases in manufacturing output associated
with economic advance (Pinto and Patil 2008).
1

1
E-waste refers to equipment that is dependent on electric currents or electromagnetic elds
in order to function. It thus includes discarded computers, ofce electronic equipment,
entertainment-device electronics, mobile phones, television sets, and refrigerators.
Figure 6.1 Preferred Solid Waste Management Hierarchy in Green Cities
Avoid
Most preferred
options
Least preferred
options
Reduce
Reuse
Recycle
Recover
Treat
Dispose
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
266 Green Cities
Table 6.2 Sources and Types of Solid Wastes in Asian Cities
Source
Typical Waste
Generators
Biodegradable
Components
Nonbiodegradable
Components
Residential Single and
multifamily
dwellings
Food waste,
paper, cardboard,
textiles, leather,
yard wastes,
wood
Glass, metals, ashes,
special wastes
(e.g., bulky items,
consumer electronics,
appliances, batteries,
oil, tires), and household
hazardous wastes,
plastics, e-waste
Industrial Light and heavy
manufacturing,
fabrication,
construction
sites, power and
chemical plants
Food waste Housekeeping wastes,
packaging, hazardous
wastes, special wastes,
e-waste, ashes
Commercial Stores, hotels,
restaurants,
markets
Paper, cardboard,
plastics, wood,
food wastes
(unused and
leftovers, expired
food packages)
Glass, metals, special
wastes, hazardous
waste, e-waste
Institutional Schools,
hospitals,
prisons,
government
centers, banks,
ofces
Paper, cardboard,
plastics, wood,
food waste
Glass, metals, special
wastes, hazardous
waste, e-waste
Construction
and demolition
New
construction
sites, road repair,
renovation sites,
demolition of
buildings
Wood Steel, concrete, dirt
City services Street cleaning,
landscaping,
parks,
beaches, other
recreational
areas, water
and wastewater
treatment plants
Street sweepings;
landscape and
tree trimmings;
general wastes
from parks,
beaches, and
other recreational
areas
Sludge, e-waste
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management as modied from What a Waste: Solid Waste Management
in Asia (1999).
Green City Solid Waste Management 267
Residential Sector
In residential areas, the dominant waste fractions include food and other
biodegradable materials, and dry potentially recyclable materials that can
be segregated into ve categories prior to collection (Figure 6.3). Most solid
waste management systems require basic segregation into biodegradable
and nonbiodegradable components. For example, in Tokyo, household waste
is segregated into four fractions: (i) packaging and paper, (ii) combustible
fraction, (iii) noncombustible fraction, and (iv) bulky waste (Tokyos Waste
Management System 2011).
Depending on the waste composition and type of generator, the various
components of waste are then segregated at source for eventual reuse,
collection, processing and treatment, and eventually disposal. Figure 6.2
shows a generic ow of waste and materials in a Green City. Small material
loops occur at source, due to reuse of recyclable components. Large
material loops occur upon processing and recycling of collected waste, thus
facilitating their use by the various generators. Recycling of waste materials
and subsequent reuse in various forms may not necessarily be undertaken
within the same city. The ow of waste depicted for the various sources
of waste show the preferred route that would be taken by the various
segregated components in a Green City solid waste management system.
Figure 6.2 Generic Waste and Material Flow in a Green City
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Generation
Material Loop
Due to Reuse
Material Loop Due to Recycling
Segregation
at Source
Segregation
Collection
Processing &
Treatment
Disposal
268 Green Cities
Food waste may be directly used as animal feed. This practice is
common in least-developed and low-income countries.
Other biodegradable components are composted by communities
within cities such as Dhaka; Cakung, Jakarta; and in Barangay Holy Spirit,
Quezon City, Philippines (Marcelo 2007, Jakarta Capital City Government
2010, and Enayetullah and Maqsood Sinha 1999).
Recovery and reuse of dry, potentially recyclable materials such as paper,
plastics, glass bottles, aluminum and tin, including that contained in discarded
appliances and electronic equipment, take place at source in residential
areas. Recovery of similar materials takes place during collection, even before
the waste reaches transfer stations, materials recovery facilities (MRFs), or
disposal sites. These practices are undertaken mostly by the informal sector
in cities in least-developed, low-income, and medium-income countries. The
sustained operations of community-managed MRFs largely depend on the
amount of recyclables that remain after waste segregation by households,
commercial establishments and institutions, and at collection vehicles, less
the amount diverted by buyback schemes that may be employed to attract
the sale of previously recovered valuable materials.
In higher-income cities such as
Tokyo and Singapore where retention
of recyclables is minimized at source
or by scavenging at collection
vehicles, collected dry recyclables
undergo nal segregation and sorting
in privately managed facilities. These
materials are then processed in
recycling plants.
Hazardous materials make up less than 5% of residential waste and can
thus be left by homeowners directly at city drop centers. These materials are
then collected and brought to a sanitary landll for nal disposal or to WTE
facilities, together with residual materials from MRFs or processing facilities.
Ash from WTE plants can be converted to slag and used as a substitute for
sand in mixing concrete, as is done in Tokyo (Environment of Tokyo 2005).
Collection of segregated waste occurs in a manner appropriate to the
waste management system employed. Food waste and other biodegradable
materials are collected on a more frequent basis than are nonbiodegradable
components.
The Municipality of Teresa, Rizal
in the Philippines mixes shredded
nonbiodegradable materials from
municipal solid waste with sand and
cement to produce hollow blocks and
footpath blocks.
Source: Teresa, Rizals Successful Waste
Management, http://www.mb.com.ph/
node/319116/tere
Green City Solid Waste Management 269
Figure 6.4 Industrial Waste Flow in a Green City
Industrial Sector
The industrial sector generates mainly special and hazardous wastes which
are collected and ultimately disposed of at treatment facilities, WTE plants,
or sanitary landlls. Packaging materials and some housekeeping waste can
be reused directly at source. The remainder, including e-waste, is collected
and brought to MRFs for nal segregation before being sold to recycling
facilities. Segregated food waste can be brought to either composting
plants or facilities that process these materials into animal feed (Figure 6.4).
As with residential waste, ash from incineration plants and residuals from
MRFs can be used as aggregates or as ingredients in the production of glass
or ceramic items (Cheng et al. 2002).
Figure 6.3 Waste Flow for Residential Areas of a Green City
MRF = materials recovery facility, WTE = waste to energy.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Household
Waste
Generation
Food Waste/
Unused Food
Direct animal
feeding
Household or
Community
Composting
Reuse Collection
Processing
at MRFs
Recycling
Composting
Daily
Collection
Daily
Collection
Processing into
animal feed
City Drop
Centers
Treatment, WTE,
Disposal
Other
Biodegradables
Dry Recyclables
Hazardous
Waste
Old appliances
& electronic
equipment, E-waste
MRF = materials recovery facility, WTE = waste to energy.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Household
Waste
Generation
Food Waste
Reuse
Recycling
Processing
at MRFs
Collection
Daily
Collection
Processing into
animal feed/
composting
Collection
Treatment, WTE,
Disposal
Packaging and
Housekeeping
Waste
Special/
Hazardous
Waste
E-waste
270 Green Cities
Commercial Sector
Commercial establishments such restaurants, grocery stores, hotels, and
markets primarily generate food waste that can be processed into animal
feed or soil conditioners in composting plants (Figure 6.5). Food waste in
high-income countries is collected and processed into animal feed known
as Ecofeed in Japan and Singapore (Sugiura et al. 2009, Recycling of
Food Waste in Singapore 2008). As with residential waste, other
biodegradable waste from commercial establishments can be processed by
composting plants.
Reuse in commercial establishments is likely to be limited to paper
products and packaging materials, since previously used glass and metal
containers must meet stringent quality and sanitation standards. Any
remaining dry recyclables and special waste, including e-waste, undergo
nal sorting and segregation for sale to recycling facilities. Residual materials
from MRFs and hazardous materials can be used as refuse-derived fuel
(RDF) for power plants, once they have undergone treatment. They can also
be used as aggregate, or disposed of in sanitary landlls.
Figure 6.5 Waste Flow for Commercial Establishments in a Green City
MRF = materials recovery facility, WTE = waste to energy.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Commercial
Waste
Generation
Food Waste/
Unused Food
Reuse Collection
Processing
at MRFs
Recycling
Composting
Daily
Collection
Daily
Collection
Processing into
animal feed
City Drop
Centers
Treatment, WTE,
Disposal
Other
Biodegradables
Dry Recyclables
Hazardous
Waste
Special Waste,
E-waste
Institutional Sector
Waste generated at institutions consists mainly of paper products used for
ofce operations. Currently, blank pages are used for printing draft reports and
as notepads. The paper materials that get collected are eventually recycled
and subsequently reused. The rest of the waste from institutions follows
Green City Solid Waste Management 271
the usual waste ow into composting plants in the case of biodegradable
materials, animal feed processors in the case of food waste, MRFs and
recycling plants in the case of dry recyclables and e-waste, and treatment or
disposal in the case of hazardous materials (Figure 6.6).
Figure 6.6 Waste Flow for Institutions in a Green City
MRF = materials recovery facility, WTE = waste to energy.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
International
Waste
Generation
Food Waste/
Unused Food
Reuse of Paper
Productions
Collection
Processing
at MRFs
Recycling
Composting
Daily
Collection
Daily
Collection
Processing into
Animal Feed
City Drop
Centers
Treatment, WTE,
Disposal
Other
Biodegradables
Dry Recyclables
Hazardous
Waste
E-waste
Construction Sector
Construction and demolition (C&D) materials can be used for lling in
low areas or as aggregates, subject to passing suitability tests. Recovery
of reusable materials from industrial facilities has been achieved in Asias
developed countries. In Taipei,China, 84% of industrial waste generated in
2010 (14.2 million tons) was reused (Environmental Protection Administration
2010); and in Hong Kong, China, 66% of combined commercial and
industrial waste generated in 2010 was recovered (Environmental Protection
Department 2012). Similarly, the Wetland Parks in Hong Kong, China
were constructed using aggregates from C&D materials (Fong, Yeung, and
Poon 2004).
Residual materials from the reuse of C&D materials and from processing
in MRFs can also be used as feed for WTE plants or as fuel for powering
cement plants. Likewise, wood and related products can be used as
temporary sheds or for building concrete forms at construction sites
(Figure 6.7). The usual practice of disposing of C&D materials in sanitary
landlls should be avoided.
272 Green Cities
General Services Sector
Trimmings from parks and trees along roadways that make up the bulk
of waste collected by city services can be composted to produce soil
conditioners using the windrow method. Street sweepings that include
various types of biodegradable and nonbiodegradable materials can be
directed to MRFs for recovery of recyclable materials (Figure 6.8). Along with
the sludge from processing at MRFs, the residual materials are then brought
to a landll for disposal or to a WTE facility.
Figure 6.7 Waste Flow for Construction and Demolition Sources in a Green City
Construction,
Demolition
Waste
Generation
Wood
Collection
of Residual
Materials
WTE Disposal
Steel, Concrete,
Dirt
Fill, Aggregation for non
load bearing structures
Temporary Construction
Sheds, Formworks
WTE = waste to energy.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
MRF = materials recovery facility.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Figure 6.8 Waste Flow for Waste Services in a Green City
Services Waste
Generation
Trimming
Recycling
Street
Sweepings
Sludge
Daily Collection
Processing at
MRFs
Daily Collection
Treatment/
Disposal
Biweekly
Collection
Composting
The waste ows from the various sources and the options for waste
processing, treatment, and disposal should be integrated into the solid
waste management system employed in Green Cities (Figure 6.9). Such a
system is consistent with the solid waste management hierarchy that gives
precedence to the 3R principle, and lesser preference to direct treatment or
disposal wherever these are practicable.
Green City Solid Waste Management 273
Directly reusable segregated waste from residences, institutions,
commercial establishments, industrial facilities, and construction and
demolition activities is returned to the sources from which they came for
reuse. The bulk of segregated waste is collected and transported directly to
MRFs or composting plants, or optionally to transfer stations in the case of
cities in which processing facilities are located at a signicant distance from
the center of waste generation. The outputs of MRFs are directed to recycling
plants within or outside the city. The MRFs then produce materials that can
be used in manufacturing. In the case of cities in the least-developed, low-
income, or middle-income countries, recyclable materials will most likely
pass through junk shops, and then directly to recycling plants or MRFs
through buyback schemes.
Any compost generated can be used as a soil conditioner for farms and
gardens. However, once the quality of the compost generated has improved
to saleable standards through increased prociency in compost production,
it can be sold.
Residuals that cannot go into composting plants or MRFs are fed into
WTE plants, or, if the latter are unavailable, disposed of in sanitary landlls. Ash
produced by WTE plants can be disposed of in sanitary landlls or used as
aggregate in the making of concrete. Once segregating and waste processing
plants are able to process the bulk of all waste generated, the viability of
operating WTE plants, incinerators, or even landlls should be evaluated.
Figure 6.9 Integrated Waste Flow Options in a Green City
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Segregated
Waste
1. Residences
2. Institutions
3. Commercial
Establishments
4. Industrial
Facilities
5. Construction &
Demolition
6. City Services
Recycling
Facilities
Transfer Station
Composting
Plants
Waste to
Energy Plants
R
e
s
id
u
a
ls
Ash
R
e
s
id
u
a
ls
Sanitary
Landfills
Materials Recovery
Facilities
Integrated
Collection
Segregated
Waste
Reuse of Segrated Waste
by Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
274 Green Cities
Methods and Technologies for Green City Solid Waste
Management
The technologies available for the processing and treatment of
biodegradable waste, recyclable materials, C&D waste, residual materials,
and hazardous waste include basic manual, biomechanical, mechanical,
and thermal methods.
Results of studies focusing on the 3R principle in solid waste
management at the Asian Institute of Technology indicate that Bangladesh,
Bhutan, Cambodia, the Peoples Republic of China (PRC), India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, and Viet Nam are still in the developmental stage
in implementing the 3R principle (Visvanathan, Adhikari, and Prem Ananth
2007). Recovery of recyclables and compost production on varying scales
are mainly undertaken by the informal sector. The use of WTE technologies
is currently limited to countries such as the PRC, Japan, the Republic of
Korea, Singapore, and Taipei,China.
Biodegradables
In Asia, a large portion of all food waste
generated is fed directly to animals
or pets. Usually totaling several kilos
per day per household, this manual
and informal practice should address
relevant health and sanitation issues.
To be nancially feasible, process-
ing of food waste from commercial
establishments into animal feed is
generally done by private companies,
as efcient biomechanical methods
of processing food waste require
that signicant amounts of material
be processed. For example, in 2005,
Singapore processed 100 tons of
food waste into animal feed per day (Khoo and Tan 2005).
Composting food waste and other biodegradable materials can be done
at the community or city level. The former is typically managed by a city
district and generally processes less than 5 tons of material per day.
The vermi-composting, xed-bin composting, and manual windrow
methods are generally used for composting operations on such a scale.
Though the quality of compost produced using worms is high, the process
Barangay Holy Spirit in Quezon
City, Philippines successfully imple-
mented waste segregation at source
and segregated waste collection.
It established a materials recovery
facility that operated six electri-
cally powered rotating drums to
process the biodegradable materials
collected. The compost produced is
used as soil conditioner for an urban
vegetable and flower farm.
Source: Marcelo, R.F. A Garbage Success
Story: How Barangay Holy Spirit in Quezon City
Became a Model for Community-Based Solid
Waste Management. Tao. JuneOctober 2007.
Green City Solid Waste Management 275
takes at least 2 months to complete and can only be done on a small scale by
communities or households. The use of bins, barrels, and windrows likewise
requires processing times of signicant length and, if not done properly,
produces lower-quality soil conditioners. Decentralized community-based,
manual composting was piloted in Dhaka using the windrow method
(Enayetullah and Maqsood Sinha 1999, Enayetullah and Hashimi 2006).
Medium- to large-scale compost-
ing of inputs exceeding 10 tons per day
requires technologies using equipment
such as electrically powered rotating
bins and bioreactors with unit capaci-
ties of 13 tons, as has been done in
selected communities in Metro Manila
(National Solid Waste Management
Commission 2008). Conversely, the
City of Thiruvananthapuram, India uses
the windrow method to process 300
tons of waste per day. Finally, Beijings
Nangong Garbage Composting Plant
uses concrete tunnels to compost
1,000 tons per day (tpd) of input (eBeijing 2009). Both of the latter two plants
are managed by the private sector.
Recyclables
Manual nal segregation and sorting of recyclable materials that are
segregated at source can be undertaken in community-managed MRFs at
rates of 510 tpd using basic equipment such as sorting tables, weighing
scales, and temporary storage areas. Currently, recovery of recyclables
in cities such as Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Jakarta, Manila, and even in
Shanghai is performed by the informal sector (UNEP 2004, Edmonds 2008).
Valuable recyclable materials recovered from waste bins, waste collection
trucks, and open dumps include paper, bottles, plastic, and metal.
Medium- to large-scale recycling
operations use mechanical equipment
such as hoppers, pay-loaders, conveyor
belts, Trommel screens, magnetic and
density separators, weighing scales,
balers, and large storage areas all
located inside large MRFs (ADB
Forthcoming). Operation of such facili-
ties requires large investment outlays
and highly trained personnel. Thus,
Decentralized community-based
composting under a publicprivate
community partnership was
successfully implemented in Dhaka.
The composting model was initiated
by a nongovernment organization
and has been replicated 38 times in
20 towns and cities in Bangladesh.
Source: Zurbrugh et al. 2003. Decentralized
Composting in Bangladesh, a Win-Win Situation
for all Stakeholders. Resources, Conservation
and Recycling. 43 (2005). 281292.
Singapore progressively increased
its recycling rate from 54% in 2007,
to 56% in 2008, to 57% in 2009,
and then to 58% in 2010, which
correspond respectively to 3.03
million, 3.34 million, 3.48 million,
and 3.8 million tons per year.
Source: National Environmental Agency. 2010.
Singapore 2010 Waste Statistics, Singapore
Waste Statistics and Recycling Rates.
276 Green Cities
such facilities are well suited to
private companies but generally
cannot be efciently operated
by communities or government
agencies. For example,
Singapores automated MRFs
are operated by the private sector
(Australian Business Intelligence
2003, French Chamber of
Commerce in Singapore 2009).
Similarly, in 2007, a private com-
pany opened a plastic recycling
plant in Beijing with an annual
capacity of 60,000 tons (China
Daily 2007).
Solid waste management systems in which source segregation is not
enforced, or is poorly practiced, result in mixed waste or poorly segregated
inputs. When used as feedstock for MRFs, such poor-quality inputs cause
health and sanitation problems by emitting foul odors and generating
leachate. Overloading and piling up of waste invariably occur in such
facilities because of the signicant differences in the amount of time it takes
to process biodegradable and recyclable materials.
Optimal reuse of C&D waste requires systematic segregation of
potentially useful components such as wood, galvanized iron (GI) sheets,
metal bars, concrete rubble, and polyvinyl chloride or GI pipes. The practice
Separate Demolition of Building Components in Tokyo (Waste Management in Tokyo I)
http://www.kankyo.metro.tokyo.jp/en/attachement/waste_management.pdf
The City of Weihai at the eastern tip
of the Peoples Republic of Chinas
Shandong Peninsula implemented a
solid waste management system based
on the 3R principle. This increased the
communitys level of environmental
awareness, improved solid waste
collection, encouraged waste segregation
by households, led to reuse of industrial
waste, and reduced the amount of the
latter that ended up in landfills.
Source: S. Pingyi. 2006. Best Practice, The Solid
Waste Management in Weihai. The First 2006
Workshop, Population and Environmental Protection
in Urban Planning.
Green City Solid Waste Management 277
of separate demolition of various parts of buildings used in Tokyo facilitates
higher rates of recovery of reusable materials (Environment of Tokyo 2005).
Residuals
Residual waste with a high caloric value recovered from MRFs and from
industrial waste can be as used refuse-derived fuel (RDF) in thermal power
plants (EC 2003).
In Manila, shredded residual materials are used in the small-scale
production of hollow blocks and bricks for nonstructural use (National Solid
Waste Management Commission 2008).
Hazardous Waste
Hazardous waste can be disposed of in sanitary landlls or incinerated to
reduce its volume. The ash from incinerators can be disposed of in sanitary
landlls or used as sand in concrete (Badur and Chaudhary 2008).
Features of Green City Waste Management
Table 6.3 shows various features of Green City waste management, including
its legal aspects, various practices, the systems employed, and types of
funding and facilities used. Similarly, it depicts the normal progression of
waste-management activities from manual to mechanical, from community-
based to private sector, and from low-technology to high-technology.
Table 6.3 Features of Green City Solid Waste Management
Solid Waste Management
Components
Least-
Developed
Countries
Low-
Income
Countries
Middle-
Income
Countries
High-
Income
Countries
Ordinances/Regulations/Acts/Programs
3R strategy programs x x x x
Garbage collection fees x x
Penalties for nonsegregation x x x x
Ban on open dumping,
littering, waste burning
x x x x
Extended producer
responsibility
x x x x
continued on next page
278 Green Cities
Solid Waste Management
Components
Least-
Developed
Countries
Low-
Income
Countries
Middle-
Income
Countries
High-
Income
Countries
Practices at Source
Waste avoidance/
minimization
x x x x
Segregation at source x x x x
Food waste used as
animal feed
x x
Reuse of dry recyclables and
paper
x x x x
Reuse of construction and
demolition waste
x x x x
System
Segregated collection x x x x
No segregation, no collection x x x x
Funding
Subsidy from government x x
Private-sector initiative x x
Equipment and Facilities
Segregated waste bins
(metal, plastic, concrete)
x x
HDPE waste bins x x x
Waste collection vehicles x x x x
Transfer stations x x
Food waste processing plants x x
Community-managed
composting plants
x x
Privately managed
composting plants
x x
Community-managed MRFs x x
Privately managed MRFs x x
Privately managed recycling
facilities
x x
Sanitary landlls x x x
LFG power plants x x x x
Waste-to-energy plants x x
HDPE = high-density polyethylene, LFG = landll gas, MRF = materials recovery facility.
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Table 6.3 continued
Green City Solid Waste Management 279
Solid Waste Management Policies, Regulations, Acts,
Programs, and Ordinances
Implementation of solid waste management programs is driven by national
policy and legislation. Most Asian countries have formulated environmental
and solid waste management laws that have been implemented with
varying degrees of success (Table 6.4; Visvanathan, Adhikari, and Prem
Ananth 2007). The degree to which implementation is successful generally
depends on the effectiveness of the information and education campaigns
undertaken, as well as the severity of penalties for noncompliance.
A regional effort in promoting the 3Rs in Asia was initiated in Tokyo in
2006. This initiative included Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Thailand, and Viet Nam (Institute for Global Environmental
Strategies 2009). As of 2009, these countries had undertaken surveys and
needs assessments, drafted corresponding national 3R strategies, and held
consultations with major stakeholders at the national level.
Table 6.4 Legal Basis for Solid Waste Management of Asian Countries
Country Law, Act, Policy, or Program
Bangladesh Bangladesh Environmental Conservation Act (1995)
Bhutan
Environmental codes of practice for solid waste management
in urban areas (2000)
Cambodia
Sub-decree of 2009 and Sub-decree on Solid Waste
Management No. 36 ANRK.BK, issued on 27 April 1999
Peoples
Republic of
China
Circular Economy Promotion Law (2009)
Indonesia
Law No. 32 for Industrial Waste (2009) and Law No. 18 for
Municipal Solid Waste (2008)
Japan Fundamental Plan for Sound Material Cycle Society (2000)
Republic of
Korea
Waste Management Act (1995), Act on the Promotion of
Saving and Recycling of Resources, and Ordinance on the
Standards of Packaging Methods and Material (1993)
Malaysia National Strategic Plan for Solid Waste Management (2005)
Nepal
Solid Waste Management and Resource Mobilization Act
(1987) and Local Self Governance Act (1999)
continued on next page
280 Green Cities
Country Law, Act, Policy, or Program
Philippines Ecological Solid Waste Management Act (2001)
Singapore
Environmental Pollution Control Act (1999), and National
Recycling Program, Zero Landll, and Zero Waste Strategy
(2000)
Sri Lanka National Policy on Solid Waste Management (2007)
Thailand National Integrated Waste Management Plan (2005)
Viet Nam
Decree No. 59/2007/N-CP - Regulation on solid waste
management (2007) and Decision No. 03/2004/Q-BTNMT -
Legislation on recycling (2004)
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
The operational aspects of solid waste management include imposition
of garbage fees for collection, and imposition of nes and penalties. The
former contribute to waste avoidance and encourage reuse. The latter compel
waste generators to comply with regulations and ordinances regarding the
3Rs, as well as prohibitions against littering, open dumping, and burning of
waste, aside from generating funds for solid waste management services.
Currently, collection of waste collection fees is implemented mainly in high-
income countries.
Extended producer responsibility (EPR) or product stewardship should
be practiced by major manufacturing companies at all levels of output. This
can be attained through nancial incentives that encourage the design of
environment-friendly products, and by making producers liable for the costs
of managing their products at the end of their useful lives. Depending on
the product, EPRs may be used in reuse, buyback, or recycling schemes
spearheaded by the manufacturer concerned. Such programs facilitate
success of 3R efforts at the residential, commercial, and institutional levels.
EPR programs have been implemented in Japan, the Republic of Korea, and
Taipei,China; and beginning in the 1990s, for e-waste (Manomaivibool 2008).
The rapidly developing economies of Asia, including the PRC, Malaysia,
and Thailand, have drafted EPR legislation, while the regions least-developed
countries have yet to develop theirs (Institute for Global Environmental
Strategies 2011a). A notable exception to the latter is Indonesia, which
has addressed management of post-consumer product and packaging
in Articles 14 and 15 of the 2008 Indonesian Law No. 18 on Solid Waste
Management (Institute for Global Environmental Strategies 2011b). In the
Table 6.4 continued
Green City Solid Waste Management 281
least-developed countries, formulation of any legislation or program relating
to solid waste management should integrate and encourage the activities
of informal collectors and recyclers of all types of solid waste, including
e-waste.
At-Source Best Solid Waste Management Practices
As for solid waste management practices, avoidance and segregation at
source and reuse of recyclable materials can be undertaken at all waste
sources, regardless of the per-capita income level of the country concerned.
Use of food waste as animal feed by households will likely prevail for some
time in the regions least-developed and low-income economies. Reuse
of C&D waste can be practiced on a large scale by major contractors,
households, institutions, commercial establishments, and industrial facilities
for their respective activities.
Segregation at source is key to the success of any solid waste
management system. At the very least, the waste generated should be
segregated into biodegradable and nonbiodegradable components.
Targeted segregation schemes for the various waste generators allow
immediate reuse of reclaimed materials where practicable. As well, they
facilitate preservation and non-contamination of materials prior to nal
sorting at MRFs, and, eventually, recycling.
Reusable and recyclable materials from the construction and demolition
waste generated in cities should be recovered for subsequent use in similar,
if not related, infrastructure projects. Responsibility for implementation of
the above guideline for reuse of C&D waste should rest with contractors
and owners, as overseen by the appropriate government agency. However,
achieving successful implementation of this guideline generally depends on
a high level of environmental awareness on the part of waste generators,
and observance and strict implementation of solid waste management laws
and ordinances through the imposition of nes or revocation of collection
rights in cases of noncompliance.
Solid Waste Management Systems
An efcient segregated collection system should support segregation at
source. Cities at differing levels of per-capita income may employ a wide
variety of collection systems, as long as the segregated wastes are collected
according to established schedules, and are delivered to waste processing,
treatment, or disposal facilities. Dhaka implemented house-to-house
collection of biodegradable materials from households that were used by
282 Green Cities
the citys decentralized composting system (Zurbrugh et al. 2002). In the
City of Pune, India, the Pune Municipal Corporation established a unique
cooperative of waste pickers and other urban poor residents that provided
doorstep garbage collection services (Wikia 2008).
While makeshift equipment for waste storage is often used in the least-
developed and low-income countries, rather than the synthetic bins used
in middle-income and high-income countries, both satisfy the principle
of providing a temporary holding area for source-segregated waste prior
to collection. The major difference between these two types of collection
systems is that in all likelihood the segregated recyclables recovered in the
least-developed and low-income countries will be collected by informal
sector operators for their own reuse, or for sale to junk shops or local MRFs.
Such practices can affect the viability of MRFs in the least-developed
and low-income countries in that to sustain operations the MRFs in these
countries may be obliged to implement innovative buyback schemes.
Food waste for processing into animal feed should be collected on a
daily basis. The remaining components of waste, including biodegradable
materials, should be collected in a manner that reects the logistical
capability of the city concerned.
Funding
Some level of investment is required to establish and operate a sound
adequate solid waste management system. In some countries, this investment
is undertaken by the government, whereas in others it is undertaken by the
private sector. Subsidies for operation of waste processing facilities, such
as MRFs and composting plants, may be provided initially. However, once
full-cost recovery is attained, such subsidies should be terminated with all
possible speed.
Regardless of the per-capita income level of the country concerned,
in large cities, either entire solid waste management systems or various
components of them are funded and operated by private companies
under various arrangements, including publicprivate partnerships. These
arrangements may include buildoperatetransfer schemes, or build
operatelease or buildoperateown schemes for MRFs, composting plants,
and WTE plants. Such arrangements address the usual gap in technical
capability and efciency of the government sector. Waste collection in
Asian cities such as Hong Kong, Manila, and Singapore is undertaken by
private haulers (ADB 2003, Bai and Sutanto 2002, Environmental Protection
Administration 2010). Waste management in Mumbai is undertaken by seven
municipal corporations, corresponding to the districts covered by their
Green City Solid Waste Management 283
respective operations (Rode 2011). Processing of food waste in Japan and
Singapore is done by the private sector. Operation of Shanghais sanitary
landll and waste to energy (WTE) plant is done by a private company
(Andersson 2007).
Waste processing facilities appropriate to Green City solid waste
management systems may be operated by local communities in lower-
income countries. Such facilities usually employ members of the informal
sector as part of an overall program for relocation of families dislocated by
establishment of waste management facilities. As per-capita income rises
and waste volumes increase, operation of solid waste management facilities
could be progressively handed over to the private sector. Such facilities
would include transfer stations, sanitary landlls, WTE plants, and even
hazardous waste treatment plants.
Equipment and Facilities
Waste containers are required for facilitating both segregation at source and,
later, segregated waste collection. In the least-developed and low-income
countries, these may take the form of metal cans, plastic containers, drums,
and concrete or rubber bins. Medium- and high-income countries employ
Plastic containers Rubber bin
Concrete bins HDPE bin
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Various Types of Waste Bins
284 Green Cities
high-density polyethylene (HDPE) bins of different colors and sizes that
correspond to the type of waste these will contain. The main purpose of
these waste receptacles is to temporarily hold the segregated materials, to
prevent their access by animals and roaming waste pickers, and to prevent
foul odors or contaminated liquids from leaking into the environment. Use
of plastic and paper bags and baskets is not advisable, since these are less
able to prevent leaks of either liquids or odors.
Waste collection vehicles facilitate transport of segregated waste
to transfer stations, processing or disposal facilities, or WTE plants. A
basic requirement for these vehicles is non-mixture of source-separated
waste components, reduced emission of foul odors during transport,
and containment of contaminated liquid that may be generated by the
biodegradable or hazardous component of the waste collected. Enclosed
trucks or compactor trucks are preferred for waste collection. While open
trucks will likely be used in the regions least-developed and low-income
countries, these should be provided with adequate coverings to mitigate the
release of unpleasant odors.
Transfer stations are intermediate facilities that link waste collection
systems and MRFs, composting plants, WTE plants, or sanitary landlls. As
cities become more crowded, waste facilities tend to be located at greater
distances from collection areas; hence the need for transfer stations or
retrotting of existing stations to allow them to serve as MRFs. Intermediate
facilities in Asian cities and their capacities in tons per day (tpd) include
Jakartas SPA Sunter Transfer Station (1,000 tpd); the Ukkadam Transfer
Station at Combaitore, India (150 tpd); Bangkoks Tharaeng Transfer Station
(1,5002,000 tpd); Beijings Datun Domestic Garbage Transfer Station (1,500
tpd); and Kuala Lumpurs Taman Beringin Transfer Station (1,800 tpd).
Various Waste Collection Vehicles
Source: Green City Solid Waste Management (2012).
Compactor truck Dump truck Open truck
Green City Solid Waste Management 285
Food WasteProcessing Plants
Food wasteprocessing plants may transform these biodegradable
materials into animal feed, methane or biogas, or soil conditioners by means
of vermi-composting.
The production of animal
feed from food waste may use
fermentation (silaging) or drying
through low-pressure frying, boiling,
high-temperature fermentation, or
high-temperature drying (Sugiura et
al. 2009). In Japan, such methods are
employed to produce Ecofeed, while
in the Republic of Korea, lactic fermentation is used to produce feed for pigs
(Yang et al. 2006).
Biogas from the fermentation of food waste can be used at both the
household and community levels in lieu of liqueed petroleum gas, as well
as for power generation.
Good quality soil conditioners for farms and vegetable gardens can
be produced using African crawlers that feed on the shredded, source-
segregated food waste of even low-income communities within cities at any
level of per-capita income.
Materials Recovery Facilities and Composting Plants
The successful and sustained operation of MRFs and composting plants
in Green Cities depends on the level of source segregation and segregated
waste collection achieved prior to the wastes arrival at such plants.
The basic process involved in MRFs at all scales of operation is systematic
separation of valuable recyclable materials from the remaining waste.
This can be done manually, as in community-owned facilities, by a team
of sorters who also temporarily store the segregated waste components.
Cities may have larger, semi-automated facilities run by the private sector
that uses conveyors and balers. Large, fully automated, and usually privately
managed MRFs use conveyor systems, magnetic separators, trommels, and
air classiers to separate the various waste components according to their
densities and the properties of their metallic waste components.
Composting entails the controlled biological decomposition of organic
matter into humus or compost that can be used as soil conditioner. The
Biogas from food waste collected in
the town of Mamallapuram in India
was used to generate power which
was returned to the same people
from a 10-kilowatt power station.
Source: Hand-in-Hand Project Turns Food Waste
into Bio-Gas. Green Thing. 17 October 2011.
286 Green Cities
main input of composting comprises shredded biodegradable components
of the waste stream. Typically, the inputs used comprise processed and
unprocessed food waste from markets, residences, and commercial
establishments.
The composting technologies that can be employed depend on the
waste volume, the amount of land area available, and the composition of
the waste itself. Households and small communities use vermi-composting,
excavated pits, and xed bins capable of completely processing food waste
within 23 months. Waste volumes exceeding 5 tons generally employ either
the windrow method or rotating bins. Inoculants are usually added to shorten
processing times and to facilitate larger throughput.
Establishment and operation of MRFs and composting plants at the
community level or higher must be always guided by the results of accurate
waste characterization studies and mass balance. The latter provides an
indication of the outputs of these facilities, and thus the viability of the
proposed operation.
Sanitary Landlls
Landlls represent one of the most common technologies used in disposing
of municipal solid waste. Typically, mixed waste is tipped and compacted
into engineered cells provided with liners that prevent leakage of leachate.
These cells are then capped with soil to mitigate emission of the foul odor
that results from decomposition of the wastes organic component. Systems
for monitoring soil, air, and water contamination in the vicinity of the facility
are set up in compliance with environmental regulations.
Green City landlls use the same safeguards against leaks and odor
emission, but accept only the residuals from waste processing facilities
and ash from WTE plants. The nature of such inputs signicantly reduces
generation of leachate and unpleasant smells, the latter comprising the
issues raised by environmentalists against the use of such disposal facilities.
These facilities can incorporate specially designed cells for accommodating
hazardous waste.
Landll gas power plants
Landll gas (LFG) mainly consists of methane generated in capped dump
sites and landlls. LFG has been used for power generation in several Asian
countries in lieu of conventional fossil fuels. Using LFG instead of fossil fuels
for power generation mitigates against the release of greenhouse gases that
cause climate change, atmospheric pollution, and explosion hazards. As a
Green City Solid Waste Management 287
general rule, the minimum amount of waste in a landll or dump site that
can be tapped for LFG is about 1 million tons. Potentially, this amount
and more have accumulated even in the least-developed and low-income
countries. Small LFG facilities in Asian cities include the 2.096 MW Jana
Landll Plant in Kuala Lumpur and the 100 KW pilot power plant in Payatas,
Quezon City (PowerPulse.Net 2005). Development of the 1 MW Rachathewa
Power Plant in Bangkok has begun (Target Neutral 2011). Tapping methane
generated from decomposition of biodegradable components in landlls also
allows the cities using this technology to gain Certied Emission Reductions
issued by the Clean Development Mechanism executive board under the
Kyoto Protocol.
Waste-to-Energy Technologies
Waste-to-energy (WTE) plants generate energy through direct or indirect
combustion or production of methane, ethanol, pellets, or synthetic fuel produced
from municipal solid waste. In general, WTE technologies can be classied as
thermochemical, biochemical, or physicochemical. Thermochemical methods
include incineration, pyrolysis, and gasication. Most WTE plants in Asia use
the incineration or direct combustion method. Japan is the leading user of WTE
technologies with about 1,900 incinerators (Kusuda 2001). The PRC has about
80 plants (Waste to Energy Research Technology Council 2010), and Singapore
has four incinerators, while Taipei,China had 18 as of 2005 (Lee 2005). Once
completed, the Timarpur Okhla Municipal Solid Waste Management plant in
New Delhi will generate 16 MW of electricity daily, fed by 2,000 tons of waste,
the latter representing 25% of the citys total amount of waste generated (Indo-
Asian News Service 2011).
With the exception of India, all WTE plants have been constructed in
medium- to high-income countries, thus reecting the scale of investment
required for establishing and operating such facilities. Use of this technology
as a component of a waste management system depends on a large volume
of waste being generated, and the capacity of disposal sites in large cities
being reached. Singapores total land area is relatively small. As a result,
the capacity of the countrys on-shore sanitary landlls has already been
reached; thus the necessity of building and operating incinerators.
Biochemical WTE methods include anaerobic digestion and
fermentation of organic waste, the latter principally comprising animal
manure. These WTE methods have not been reported as being applicable
to a scale large enough for power generation from the biodegradable
components of municipal solid waste.
Physicochemical methods include mechanical methods and autoclaves
for upgrading the physical and chemical properties of solid waste sufciently
for the production of pellets or refuse-derived fuel (RDF) that can be used for
288 Green Cities
power generation. Since 1997, Japan has constructed 57 RDF plants (Ministry
of Environment 2008).
Aside from their signicant initial investment costs, the major issues
mitigating against the use of WTE plants that use direct combustion is the
release of dioxins, furans, and mercury into the atmosphere. The pollution
control mechanisms incorporated into current generations of WTE plants
have reduced the release of these pollutants to levels that fall within those
prescribed by developed-country environmental standards.
The use of WTE plants that release reduced amounts of furans and
dioxins is compatible with recycling under Green City waste management
regimes. Studies conducted in the United States have shown increased
recycling rates in cities where WTE facilities are operated relative to those
lacking such facilities (Berenyi 2009).
Aside from the direct combustion method, Green Cities can also use
autoclaves that allow recovery of recyclables as a by-product of producing
RDFs for power generation.
The Current State of Green City Waste
Management
The menu of technologies that can be used in Green City solid waste
management regimes is varied, and has been partially taken advantage of
by most Asian cities.
The legal framework for effective solid waste management using the 3R
principle was essentially established in most, if not all, Asian countries as
early as the turn of the 21st century. Presumably, information and education
campaigns have been launched in most countries to increase the level of
environmental awareness of the various classes of waste generators.
Collection systems have likewise been established, although in numerous
countries, mixed waste is still being loaded and transported to disposal,
treatment, and processing facilities. Furthermore, use of WTE facilities
appears to be on the rise in the regions medium- and high-income countries.
Good solid waste management practicesnotably segregation at
sourcehave not been reported by, or observed in, most Asian cities with
the exception of Singapore, which has achieved signicant and consistent
progress in recycling. Recovery of recyclables by the informal sector from
bins, collection vehicles, and disposal sites is still dominant. Accordingly,
segregated waste collection cannot be implemented, nor can MRFs and
Green City Solid Waste Management 289
composting plants fed with mixed waste be established or operated.
Establishing and operating such facilities depends on the regions achieving
Green City status with regard to solid waste management, as these facilities
receive the bulk of waste generated under the preferred waste ow of a
Green City. Moreover, such facilities provide opportunities for subsequent
reuse of valuable recyclables from all classes of waste generators. In the
absence of such facilities, the mixed waste collected ends up in landlls or
open dumps, or, in some middle- and high-income countries, in WTE plants.
This is unfortunate, since not even the use of technology can prevent the
loss of resources inherent in incinerating mixed waste to produce power, or
worse yet, disposing of it in landlls.
Notwithstanding the seeming lack of political will necessary for
implementing environmentally sound waste management practices, the
latter have, in some cases, been observed in several cities that, though
on a small scale, are consistent with Green City solid waste management
practices. These were attained in communities that fully supported
specic solid waste management projects and that enjoyed the support
and collaboration of numerous government institutions, nongovernment
organizations, and private sector entities. It is noteworthy that most of these
best practices employed only basic solid waste management methods
rather than mechanized or thermal technologies.
In order to instill a culture of sound solid waste management practice
among waste generators of all classes, existing laws and ordinances must
be strictly implemented through imposition of nes and penalties. For
example, this requires enforcement of the no segregationno collection
rule. Parallel to this is sustained Information, education, and communication
campaign, with regard to not only the negative impacts of poor solid waste
management practices or complete lack thereof but also the healthand
more importantlyeconomic benets of recovery of valuable resources
from segregated waste.
Over time and likely within a generation, a waste management culture
based on sound solid waste management practices will develop as a result
of an increased level of environmental awareness. The growing realization
of the nite nature of both the natural resource base and available space,
the low rate of utilization of reusable materials from waste, and deteriorating
health and environmental conditions will collectively drive governments,
institutions, the private sector, and local residents alike to actively collaborate
in solid waste management initiatives. Concurrent with this will be the
progressive attainment of Green Citypreferred waste ows and goals,
regardless of the per-capita income level of the city or country.
290 Green Cities
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296
CHAPTER 7
Financing Sustainable Cities
by Michael Lindeld, Vergel Latay, and Vince Michael Docta
Introduction
The array of nancing mechanisms available to cities for investments
relating to the environment and climate change is large. This chapter reviews
three generic types of these investments. The rst type encompasses funds
under the direct control of local governments, or funds routinely accessible
to them. Examples include national government grants for specic purposes
such as improving solid waste management or addressing other urban
sustainability issues. The second type comprises the range of private sector
nancing available, both from national and international sources. The third
type includes the variety of funding vehicles available from multilateral and
other public sector sources.
Each of these three types of nancing includes a variety of mechanisms
and instruments. This chapter therefore includes numerous examples of
each, as well as some discussion of the issues relevant to each vehicle
or instrument. It should not be forgotten that these nancing mechanisms
are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, efciencies may be gained and costs
lowered by using a mix of such vehicles to nance particular projects or
initiatives. In this regard, effective and professional project structuring pays
signicant dividends in achieving these potential efciencies and savings,
this latter issue being discussed at greater length at the end of the chapter.
Accessing Environmental Finance Requires Sound
Financial Management
Governments and other agencies seeking to implement environment- or
climate-related projects are often encouraged by the bewildering array of
funding sources available. However, this variety of funding sources cannot
Financing Sustainable Cities 297
act as a counterbalance for poor nancial management. Indeed, accessing
such sources of nance often requires meeting stringent criteria relating
to institutional capacity, nancial systems standards, and performance.
Figure 7.1 below sets out the framework for the capacity development
priorities and system improvements necessary for accessing these funding
sources. This chapter discusses each of the major elements in Figure 7.1
in some detail. For example, the section immediately below begins this
process by discussing traditional government and own-source nancing
mechanisms in detail.
Ultimately, nancing environment- or climate-related investments
begins with the nancial management of existing assets. If these are
well maintained and efciently utilized, additional investments may be
postponed and even avoided. For example, introduction of water meters
in Brisbane, Australia allowed users to manage their water consumption
more efciently. This enabled reductions in average consumption down to
123 liters per day, making Brisbane residents some of the best water-savers
in the developed world. More importantly, this signicantly contributed to
deferment of programmed capital investments totaling $3.2 billion for the
whole of Southeast Queensland territory. In addition to managing and
efciently utilizing existing assets, if appropriate, these can be leased out
for management by a third party to produce cost savings, or possibly to
generate a prot for reinvestment in new assets.
Even with the best management of existing assets possible, new
projects still require funding. Investment programs for this purpose should
be based on sound asset planning that takes account of environmental,
energy-efciency, and climate-change issues. Again, the foundation for
this funding is own-source resources, which in Figure 7.1 is referred to as
internal revenue generation. Other funding vehicles are on offer, either as
matching grants from other tiers of government, or from capital markets
or private sector partners. However, both of the latter require a sound
governmental counterparty. The need for proper nancial management is
thus fundamental to obtaining nancing for environment-related projects,
and is an unavoidable step in obtaining it.
298 Green Cities
Figure 7.1 Urban Infrastructure Financing and Development Framework
Source: Based on P. Singh. 2007. Financing Urban Development, Infrastructure, and Private Sector
Involvement. Conference on Investing in Asias Urban Future. Manila.

Asset
Divestiture
Asset
Management
Projects
Investment
Government
Grants and Loans
Internal
Revenue
Generation
Capital Markets

Sound public finance
Annual budget
systems
Domestic and foreign
debt management
Efficient transfer
systems
Accounting systems
Tax and revenue
systems
Operational
efficiencies
Tariff enhancement
Benchmarking
Accounting/revenue
transparency
Credit
enhancement
/rating
Business Plan
Project
development
process
Project
development
funds


Investment
programming
Sources of
funds
Enabling
framework
Capacity
development
requirements
Public
Private
Partnerships
Accounting, tax and operational reforms; private sector management; project development and planning; tariff reforms; credit
enhancement instruments; capital market management; inter-governmental fiscal transfer reform
Maximizing Own-Source Financing
The amount of nancing available to a particular project is based on the
nancial strength of the entity seeking it. In this regard, the old saying that
the less you need money, the more people want to give you is applicable
to obtaining nancing for environment-related initiatives. Local governments
and other subsovereign sponsors of urban environmental infrastructure are
often their own worst enemies in that their willingness and capacity to collect
even the revenue they are due is poor. Nowhere is this deciency more
glaring than in the case of property tax. Properties missing from the register,
undervaluation of the properties that are included in it, lack of effective local
government collection mechanisms, and informal payments made in lieu
of tax collections all undermine the scal health of project sponsors and
deprive them of the means they need to leverage other forms of funding.
Aside from collecting all mandated taxes efciently, the following are several
additional areas in which cities may bolster nancing
1
User charges that cover the full cost of services such as water and
electricity. This includes the cost of providing supply and damage
caused by usage, as well as the opportunity cost of taking the resource
from other potential users, including the ecosystem.
1
Depending on reserve powers and sharing under the relevant national and state or provincial
legislation.
Financing Sustainable Cities 299
Emission or efuent charges based on the quality or quantity of waste
generated.
Product charges on goods that pollute surface or groundwater during
or after consumption, these being based on the actual value of damage
caused by their use.
Tradable rights allowing the use of a given quantity of a resource and
establishment of a market for such rights.
Marketable permits that allow a given amount of a pollutant to be
released. This includes entitling an entity to treat its waste and sell its
permit, or to not treat its waste and purchase additional permits sufcient
to counterbalance the amount of pollution released.
2
Tax-increment nancing, in which a portion of tax revenues resulting from
improvements is earmarked to repay the cost of those improvements.
Refund systems for commodities packaged in reusable or recyclable
containers that ensure that these are returned for proper disposal
or reuse.
Joint development through publicprivate partnerships.
While numerous types of public sector funding are available for green
investments, it is sound local-revenue performance that provides the
basis for access to grants and other types of nancing from higher levels
of government. However, this is only true given the absence of perverse
incentives, which effectively reward governments or agencies for poor
performance. For example, a housing grant program that provides funds
in proportion to the number of dilapidated dwellings in the public housing
stock effectively encourages poor maintenance of such dwellings.
Leveraging Private Sector Financing
Project sponsors should explore the unbundling of commercially viable or
contestable infrastructure components that can be nanced by the private
sector. This entails separating components that must be government-
funded from those that the private sector might wish to undertake. For
example, water treatment plants can be unbundled from the piped network
that serves such water systems. Much has been written on private sector
participation in various sectors. The PublicPrivate Infrastructure Advisory
Facility (PPIAF) website discusses the unbundling process in detail, and
provides specic examples that include (i) improving the performance
and nancial viability of small water utilities in the Philippines; (ii) public
private partnerships in wastewater services and solid waste management
2
Managing these to reduce overall pollution over time is part of the exercise.
300 Green Cities
in India; and (iii) increasing the efciency of service delivery and reducing
public subsidies for bus transport services in Viet Nam.
3
As a result,
the discussion of unbundling provided by the PPIAF website is not
replicated here.
Private sector participation must be supported by effective, independent
regulation that mitigates the risks associated with a private entity being in a
monopoly-provider role in the provision of basic services such as water and
energy. The regulatory regime must contain provisions for a fair service price,
sustainable service provision, and any distributional objectives. Contracts
should clearly specify the funding for any public service obligation of the
provider, such as lower prices for the poor to be provided through sustainable
government transfers, tax-deductible cross-subsidies, or other means.
Which investments should be undertaken?
This section lists the types of environment-related projects that might receive
high priority for nancing, and summarizes the key issues and risks associated
with each type of project, including how revenue might be generated to
service debt or provide a return to equity investment.
Public transport:
Right-of-way (ROW) and relocation risks require that funds be available
for acquisition (and streamlined court processes for compulsory
acquisition) of ROW, as well as relocation mechanisms that minimize
disruption of low-income communities and provide alternate housing
options for dislocated communities.
Ridership projections are notoriously incorrect, with actual ridership
often falling far short of projections for roads and mass rapid transit
systems. Conversely, ridership projections for bus rapid transit systems
typically overstate actual ridership.
Replacement or incorporation of informal-sector service providers
often requires difcult or protracted negotiations relating to governance
arrangements and bridging nance.
There exists a potential for land-based nance in ROW acquisition.
Waste management:
The not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) effect often requires that funds be
provided for community liaison and acquisition, as well as streamlined
3
PublicPrivate Infrastructure Advisory Facility. http://wbi.worldbank.org/developmentmarketplace/
partner/public-private-infrastructure-advisory-facility-ppiaf
Financing Sustainable Cities 301
court processes for compulsory acquisition of land for establishing
waste disposal sites.
Replacement or incorporation of informal-sector service providers into
waste management initiatives requires funding for training and livelihood
programs, as well as difcult-to-establish governance arrangements,
since more than one local government is generally involved.
The form and reliability of collection of fees from users of the proposed
disposal site must be specied, and any costs of doing so included in
estimated project costs.
Water supply and wastewater disposal facilities:
Both the cost and reliability of supply of raw water must be specied, as
must the ROW risk for trunk supply mains and collectors.
Water treatment and in particular wastewater treatment initiatives are
often subject to the NIMBY effect that requires the types of actions
referred to above.
Replacement or incorporation of informal-sector service providers into
water supply and wastewater disposal initiatives requires funding for
training and livelihood programs.
Tariff levels and any related adjustments to them must be specied, as
well as the form and reliability of collection of availability payments or
treatment fees.
Energy, energy efciency, and industrial greening initiatives:
Project formulation and development processes are expensive, but are
often recoverable.
Bridging funds are required to nance up-front expenses.
Savings or revenues from such initiatives may be uncertain because
these depend on energy tariffs and prices for recyclable materials.
Drainage:
ROW risk exists for large collectors.
Identifying a potential revenue stream is difcult for some projects, but
often possible.
There exists a potential for land-based nancing for dikes, drainage ROWs,
and retention basins if these include a revenue-earning component such
as user charges for recreational or concessionaire spaces.
302 Green Cities
There exists a potential for levying local rates (increments to property
taxes) for recovering costs in exchange for expanded amenities and
ood-avoidance benets.
City greening:
As with drainage facilities, revenue streams for parks and other open
spaces are sometimes limited.
While parks and other open spaces are usually publicly funded,
maintenance costs can be defrayed and amenities often expanded
through appropriate concessioning (i.e., charging providers of services
for use of a portion of the land).
There exists a potential for levying local rates for expanded amenities
and other benets.
Urban agriculture:
Some cities such as Shanghai already obtain a signicant share of their
total food supply from their immediate hinterlands.
Because urban or vertical farming is currently highly energy-intensive,
it is likely to be of more interest in the future, since ongoing research
continues to lower its energy intensity.
If potential energy efciencies are achieved, conventional commercial
nance may be forthcoming.
District heating and cooling initiatives:
The energy cost for district heating and cooling and its reliability are
potentially important issues, although efciencies can be achieved
through planning and the use of cogeneration.
ROW issues likewise exist, although to a lesser degree than for public
transport initiatives.
It is often difcult to obtain the collective agreement of building owners
to retrot existing buildings, particularly if retrotting includes insulation.
Tariff levels and any adjustments to them must be specied, as must the
form and reliability of collection procedures for availability payments or
treatment fees.
Financing Sustainable Cities 303
Adaptation Investments:
It is often difcult to justify capital costs for providing essentially the
same service as previously, although the manner of provision is more
climate-resilient than previously.
ROW issues exist in the case of roads and dikes, as do NIMBY issues in
the case of relocation of treatment plants.
Replacement or incorporation of informal-sector service providers
into adaptation initiatives requires funding for training and livelihood
programs.
Tariff levels and adjustments to compensate for resilience investment
must be specied, as must the form and reliability of collection
procedures for availability payments and treatment fees,
There exists a potential for land-based nancing in some circumstances.
Existing Subsovereign Systems for Environmental
Infrastructure Finance
Overall Context
The practicalities of nancing specic investments, or changing the pattern
of investments for addressing global environmental issues such as climate
change require a clear understanding of the policy context in the country
concerned. The latter sets country priorities, and thus the resources available
both from the public and private sectors for nancing such investments.
While member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) grouping have effective environmental lobby groups
that are often represented by green parties in their legislatures, if not in
government, the situation in developing countries is less clear. The latter
countries do have environmental lobby groups, and their citizens are aware
of environmental issues, but the inuence of such groups and sentiments is
generally less than in the OECD countries for a variety of reasons. Because
they are rarely represented in the legislature, they cannot directly inuence
government resource allocation or policies that determine resource allocation
by other levels of government, utilities, households, or enterprises.
An important issue in this regard is one of relative poverty. While many
developing countries actually have standards of living superior to that
enjoyed by the OECD countries less than a century ago, their citizens feel
that this is not sufcient. Budgetary priority thus goes to investments that
foster growth, which is dened in materialistic terms such as roads, ports,
304 Green Cities
water supply facilities, and housing, which constitute the basic infrastructure
that supports growth. If many citizens cannot access adequate housing and
political awareness of this issue is great, a national or local government that
diverts resources from low-income housing does so at its peril.
A second issue that compounds the priority problem referred to is the
not-caused-by-us (NCBU) attitude, which is a nonconfrontation strategy
that is as logically awed as NIMBY, but one that attempts to preemptively
take an even higher moral ground. Not bailing out the lifeboat just because
you did not cause the collision that sank the ship is counterproductive. This
being said, NCBU is a potent rallying cry for the opposition, regardless of
what it opposes or whatever its political afliation.
A third issue compounding the priority problem is the size of the
informal sector. Much larger portions of developing country economies are
in the informal economic sectorup to 60% in some countries. This means
that their economic systems are much less amenable to the mechanisms
OECD governments normally employ to implement policy. Legislation, tax
breaks, and standards do not heavily inuence enterprises that are not
registered, that do not pay tax, and that have no concept of standards
except as justications for bribes.
A fourth issue compounding the priority problem is simply lack of
capacitytechnical, administrative, and, most particularly, nancial.
4
As
much as a developing country government would like to act to protect the
environment, it is often constrained by its human and nancial resources.
The (understandable) attitude is: better to resolve immediate issues for
which we have some capacity than to attempt to resolve issues for which
have few resources.
In developing countries, we are therefore in a situation in which there are
heavy disincentives at all levels of policy and action for nancing-needed
investments for responding to climate and the green agenda overall. What this
means for nancing such investments is explored in the following sections.
The Four Components of Sound Financing Systems
Sound nancing systems must comprise four components if green nance
is to be forthcoming. Furthermore, each of the following components helps
overcome the impediments described above:
1) National scal structures that provide incentives, both positive and
negative, for pollution reduction, energy efciency, greenhouse gas
4
Because with money, you can usually get the technical and administrative inputs required.
Financing Sustainable Cities 305
reduction, and adaptive investments. Potentially, such structures can
address all of the above issues if well designed.
2) Systems that regulate national and international private capital markets
and support their capacity to formulate, promote, and deploy nancial
products that enhance access to green nance and its affordability.
Green funds that invest in mitigation provide one such example.
3) Public structures at the international level such as the Global Environment
Facility that help developing countries adjust to climate change or
overcome the transaction costs of investing in mitigation. Such structures
are often nancially and economically viable in the long run, but require
signicant up-front outlays to implement. Such mechanisms help address
priority, NCBU, and capacity issues if they are structured well.
4) Microeconomic structures for encouraging and supporting the private
sector, as well as subnational government-agency capacities in
formulating, structuring, and nancing green investments.
A nancing system that incorporates all four of the components above
in a way that allows their benecial interaction allows green issues to be
addressed in a comprehensive way. One example of this is the Republic
of Koreas nancing system that includes a Green Growth Initiative. This
program targets both the demand and the supply side of green products
and investments (respectively referred to as Green Consumer and Green
Industry in Figure 7.2). The Green Finance component both provides nance
Figure 7.2 The Republic of Koreas Green Growth Initiative
Source: D. Oh. 2011. Green Financing in [the Republic of] Korea. PhD Research Paper, Korea
Corporate Governance Service.
Green Growth
Green Consumer
Green Industry
Green
Economy
Green
Consumption
Promotion
Regulation
R&D fund
Interest Beneft
Promotion/
Regulation
Investment/
Loan
Technology
Commercialization
Green
Product
Green Government
Green Financing
Green R&D
306 Green Cities
for green investments and subsidizes consumption of green products,
generally through tax breaks. These activities are supported by tax-revenue-
funded green research-and-development funds that assist industry in
developing the products, services, and infrastructure required for supporting
a green economy. Under the programs Green Government component, the
government acts as a role model, a coordinator, and a standard-setter.
While government can promote change by paying for key investments
directly, the most effective method of promoting green growth, as depicted
in the Republic of Korea system, is through leveraging private sector funding.
This is, in any case, essential in Asia. The total amount of urban infrastructure
(mainly environmental infrastructure) required each year in Asia is valued
at an estimated $100 billion, while current annual urban environmental
infrastructure investment is about $40 billion (Cities Development Initiative
for Asia 2012). Even though government budgets are constrained in the
wake of the 2008 nancial crisis and subsequent stimulus packages, and aid
is squeezed by nancial problems in the OECD countries, at the same time
Asias private capital markets are ush with funds. The only viable strategy
for bridging Asias investment gap is thus to leverage private sector funding.
Current Sources of Public Sector Financing
for Green Investments
This section describes the public sector mechanisms currently available
for nancing green investments, including their underlying public policy
aspects, as well as associated incentives for both promoting investment
and leveraging private sector funding.
5
Taxes
At the metro, city-region, and even mega-region level, planning must be
reinforced by land tax policies and incentives for green development.
Levying taxes on the unimproved value of land (i.e., the price the land would
command for the highest and best use of the land as zoned) is essential for
efcient and sustainable use of land resources. Australia uses this system
relatively effectively. In practice, it means that you can have your single-story
bungalow, empty industrial facility, or rice paddy in the middle of the central
business district surrounded by 30-story buildings, but your land tax will be
based on the value of the land as if you had a 30-story building on it.
5
Baietti et al. (2012).
Financing Sustainable Cities 307
Practical political considerations complicate the implementation of
this effective tax principle. There are sometimes shouts of inequity from
granny, who inherited the said single-storey bungalow but has no income to
support such a tax. One could retort that granny is a wealthy woman and can
Box 7.1 The Land Value Tax/Resource Rent Approach to
Financing Green Development
Land value taxation is a means of shifting part of the property tax burden from
land and buildings in combination, onto land values alone for the benefit of
the community (Lichfield and Connellan 2000).
In 1980, Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsylvania, was identified as the second
most financially distressed city in the United States. Municipal tax policy
reforms were undertaken to shift taxes off of buildings and on to land. Now
taxes on buildings have dropped, and land is taxed five times more heavily.
The resulting effect was that potentially developable sites were freed from
speculation and under-use, while with buildings less burdened by taxes,
developers with viable projects began restoring the city. Harrisburgs quality
of life is now one of the highest in the United States. This success prompted
17 other Pennsylvania municipalities to put this policy into place. All have
evidenced benefits of economic regeneration as indicated by increased
issuance of building permits and other criteria.
In Hong Kong and Singapore, city authorities capture land value primarily
through renting out government-owned land at rates reflecting the economic
value of the activities thereon. The city-state of Singapore has a tax rate on
land of 16%, this supplying funds equivalent to 40% of the governments total
budget. Meanwhile, Hong Kong, which was founded exclusively on land
owned by the government, funds 40% of its budget from site rent. The city uses
land rentnot subsidyto fund its metro system and, in turn, building the
metro increased the value of land. For Hong Kongs metro system, land value
capture (known as betterment taxes) represented a financial windfall. In
the 1980s, the system was already showing a profit, partly due to the increase
in land value along the metro line. However, it is interesting to observe how
this income from land value increased and development was unexpected in
the original viability projections. The non-fare revenue of the metro system
comprises proceeds of land rent (direct betterment value), station commercial
and related businesses such as retail and advertising sales (indirect betterment
value), and other public mass transport investments.
Sources: M. Pauwen. 2011. Successful Examples of Land Value Tax Reforms. http://www.
earthrights.net/docs/n4devt.html; L. Coconcelli. 2011. Land Value Capture as a Funding Source
for Urban Investment. European Investment Bank. http://www.eib.org/attachments/general/events/
luxembourg_11072011_cocconcelli_en.pdf; R. T. Meakin. 1990. Hong Kong [China]s Mass Transit
Railway. Rail Mass Transit for Developing Countries. 19. July 1990. 125143; Licheld and Connellan.
2000. Land Value and Community Betterment Taxation in Britain: Proposals for Legislation and
Practice. Lincoln Institue of Land Policy. Cambridge, Massachussetts, USA.
308 Green Cities
live very well from the proceeds of the sale, provided the capital gains and
transfer taxes are not prohibitively high. As an aside, such transaction costs
should be low in principle, as you the policy maker want a liquid land market
in order to encourage densication and redevelopment that embraces green
principles. If you are really soft-hearted, you can defer grannys taxes until
the land is sold, or, if you are soft-headed, you can exempt her completely
during her occupancy. Of course, you need to check that granny is not
subletting, or has not passed away some 10 years ago, and this fact has
somehow escaped the knowledge of the friends or relatives now living
in said bungalow. Effective enforcement is thus important, especially when
there are exceptions to a regulation.
Resource Pricing
For water, macro-level resource pricing is also important. Yes, it is nice that
all those lovely oranges are produced with all that subsidized water, but
the city can use the water for more productive enterprises, and agriculture
should pay the real price of the resources it uses. Cost-recovery pricing
encourages water conservation, the exploitation of alternative sources (e.g.,
rainwater harvesting) and recycling, which becomes economic more readily
given real economic pricing of water resources. We know that farmers are a
powerful lobby group, but Australias National Water Initiative shows what
can be achieved with rational pricing policies when these are complemented
by stringent enforcement.
The implications of rational resource pricing go far beyond the boundary
of the city. Cities may make economically viable investments in upstream
water resource and forest management. Preserving the water sources
quantity and quality and reducing ood peaks by undertaking such
investments far upstream is, for some cities such as Jakarta and Bangkok,
very importantso important that such activities may have to be managed
by the national government.
Air pollution has been treated as a health issue that is typically addressed
by regulating emissions. In many cities, this remains a high priority. But more
important to the future of the human species is the dumping of greenhouse
gases (GHGs) into the atmosphere, mainly by city-related economic activity.
As a result, pricing of the atmospheric resource has become an important
issue. This is politically a highly contentious issue due to the NCBU principle.
Thus, international efforts at correctly pricing the atmospheric resource have
met with little success. However, some cities are implementing cap-and-
trade schemes of their own, effectively pricing the atmosphere as a resource
within their jurisdictional boundaries. Tokyos scheme is the most advanced,
though Saitama, another Japanese city, is also participating. Similarly, a
range of other subnational emissions trading schemes exist outside of Asia
(Baietti et al. 2012). Trading of credits among these schemes is foreseen,
Financing Sustainable Cities 309
and both Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the World Bank are interested
in promoting such a system. Trading of city credits among developed- and
developing-country cities thus holds some promise.
Box 7.2 Indonesias Citarum Scheme
The Citarum River runs a total
of 11.6 kilometers and has
a total area of 13,000 square
kilometers. This important
body of water provides drinking
water, hydropower, irrigation
water, municipal water supply,
and aquaculture opportunities
to Jakarta and other urban
centers in West Java. The
Citarum River basin supports
a population of more than
28 million people, and 20% of
the countrys industrial output.
However, the basins water
resources have come under
increased pressure over the past
20 years from urbanization and
industrial growth, causing severe water pollution, acute stress, and depletion
of groundwater in several locations. Environmental degradation has reached
levels that compromise public health and livelihoods, particularly for the poor.
For these reasons, the government adopted a concerted approach to
improving land and water management in the basin. In this regard, it
requested help from the Asian Development Bank in developing and funding
a long-term development program for the Citarum River basin. This program
was one component of a strategic plan for maintaining clean, healthy, and
productive catchments and rivers. Under the program, the government and
local communities worked together to achieve sustainable benefits for all
inhabitants of the Citarum River basin.
The Integrated Citarum Water Resources Management Investment Program
funded a range of interventions necessary for introducing integrated water
resources management (IWRM) into the Citarum River Basin. These
interventions included (i) institutions and planning for IWRM; (ii) water
resource development and management; (iii) water sharing; (iv) environmental
protection; (v) disaster management; (vi) community empowerment;
(vii) data, information, and decision support; and (viii) program management.
The investment program was funded through a multitranche financing facility
(MFF) that provided more than 15 years of water-related infrastructure and
services across a number of IWRM key areas throughout the Citarum River
basin. In essence, the MFF enabled
continued on next page
Initially supported by an ADB Investment Program
(which later led to leveraging of private sector
and community investments), sustainable IWRM
interventions have been realized for Indonesias
Citarum River Basin.
310 Green Cities
Box 7.3 Emissions Trading in Tokyo
Emissions trading is a market-based approach to addressing air pollution
problems. If designed and implemented well, emissions trading systems can be
economically efficient in that they provide incentives for participants to reduce
emissions of specific pollutants.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Government developed the Emissions Trading System
(ETS), which is the worlds first cap-and-trade program at the city level that targets
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions. The ETS applies to approximately 1,340
large facilities including industrial factories, public facilities, educational facilities,
as well as, uniquely, commercial buildings. The ETS took effect in April 2010.
During the first phase of the scheme which runs up to 2014, participating
organizations will have to cut their carbon emissions by 6%. From 2011, those that
fail to operate within their emission caps will be required to purchase emission
allowances to cover any excess emissions, or alternatively, to invest in renewable
energy certificates or offset credits issued by smaller businesses or branch offices.
However, under the rules of the scheme, credits issued outside Tokyo cannot be
equivalent to more than a third of the emission cuts required of participants.
Firms that fail to comply with the new rules will face fines and will be ordered to
cut emissions by 1.3 times the amount by which they failed to reduce emissions
during the first phase of the scheme. In addition, offenders may be named and
shamed by the government,
Sources: World Bank. 2010e. Tokyos Emissions Trading System: A Case Study, Directions in
Urban Development. Washington, DC; The Guardian. 2010. Tokyo kicks off carbon trading scheme.
8 April; Green Futures Magazine. 2010.Tokyo launches Asias rst ETS. 6 July.
Box 7.2 continued
flexibility in investment decisions and timing, based on needs and
constraints;
implementation based on the readiness of individual projects;
development of a partnership for supporting the long-term vision of
Citarum River basin stakeholders in a sustainable manner; and
building capacity in IWRM.
Finally, the MFF facilitated funding from sources available to the central and
regional governments, leveraged private sector and community investments,
and facilitated effective financial planning with other funding institutions.
Source: ADB. 2008b. Report and Recommendation of the President: Proposed Multitranche
Financing Facility and Administration of Grant and Technical Assistance Grant, Republic of Indonesia:
Integrated Citarum Water Resources Management Investment Program. Manila.
Financing Sustainable Cities 311
Box 7.4 Financing Urban Agriculture
Analysis of 13 experiences with urban and peri-urban agriculture in Asia,
Europe, and Latin America revealed that financing of urban agriculture has
taken three forms: (i) mobilization of both financial and nonfinancial resources
by urban farmers and their families, (ii) subsidies from both public sector and
international agencies that are channeled through a variety of mechanisms,
and (iii) provision of credit, generally in limited amounts, provided to individual
borrowers rather than groups.
These mechanisms have been able to
support three types of urban agriculture:
(i) a subsistence-economy type, which
is generally family-based, and does not
generate a cash surplus, but provides
food or medicinal plants that reduce the
expenses of the family and improve diets
and well-being; (ii) a market-oriented
type that comprises production, agro-
processing, and marketing of agricultural
commodities; and (iii) a third type that
is undertaken as part of leisure and
recreational activities that relate to healthy
practices by cities and citizens, raising
awareness of environmental issues and
allowing children to experience food
production cycles.
Subsidies, both from public sector and international sources, reduce the
financial burden on small urban producers that engage in subsistence-economy
urban agriculture. Such producers are typically unable to secure conventional
banking guarantees for urban agriculture for two reasons. First, urban
subsistence agriculture is not commercialized. Second, it is undertaken by the
urban poor, who lack title to the land used and have no fixed employment or
regular income. Such persons must thus mobilize their own resources, unless
they are assisted by government agencies or nongovernment organizations.
The market-oriented type of urban agriculture appears to likewise have
limited access to credit, but receives nonfinancial subsidies such as technical
assistance or other inputs such as seeds, equipment, or tools.
Leisure and recreational-oriented urban agriculture enjoy significant public
sector subsidies. For example, in St. Petersburg, such subsidies cover leases
for trucks and tools, debt alleviation, microcredit for agro-processing or for
agricultural production, seeds and animals, short-term loans (of less than
1-year duration) for acquisition of assets, and general microcredit (especially
to women). In addition, conventional commercial loans are available to clients
who are able to provide a high level of assurance to financiers. Nevertheless,
own resources constitute a large part of financing to urban producers.
Source: C. Y. Cabanes. 2006. Financing and Investment for Urban Agriculture in Cities Farming
for the Future, Urban Agriculture for Green and Productive Cities. Manila: Resource Centre on
Urban Agriculture and Food Security Foundation, International Development Research Centre, and
International Institute of Rural Reconstruction
Introduction 15
Rapid population growth at the global level has vastly increased
the amount of land used for food production. In fact, nearly 30% of the
earths total land surface is now used for agricultural purposes. This has
radically altered the natural landscape and functioning of ecosystems.
However, alternative approaches to food production that can prevent further
encroachment on ecosystems while also increasing urban resilience are
available. The experience of Shanghai, which is nearly self-sufcient in the
production of vegetables and grain, demonstrates that signicant amounts
of food can be grown on empty urban lots. Similarly, rooftop gardens in
Berlin and New York are often used for urban farming, the scale of which can
range from simple balcony boxes to vertical farms that grow food inside
environment-controlled, multistory buildings that recycle organic, human,
and animal waste and wastewater (Figure 3). Such initiatives provide an
alternative to trucking or ying produce in from distant locales where land-
intensive methods of food production are used.
Figure 3 A Vertical Farm
Gray water collection and
sand fltration system-
used to irrigate soil crops
and fush toilets
Methane and CO2 tanks -
methane used for heating
biogas digester, apartment
cooking and heating
Biogas Digester- Methane and
CO2 by-products
Black water gravity
fltration system
through perimeter
hydroponics
Black water liquid and
solid separation tanks -
solid waste dried in kiln
for fertilizer
Liquid separate sent to
Hydroponic Filtration
Loop
Nutrients removed
by plants as source of
fertilizer
Black water gravity fed
fltration systemthrough
perimeter hydroponics
By-product of fresh
water used in gray
water collection or
safely returned to water
source
2009 BLAKE KURASEK
Black water collection -
frombuilding sewage
CO2 = carbon dioxide.
Source: Despommier, Dickson. The Vertical Farm: Reducing the Impact of Agriculture on Ecosystem
Functions and Services. Columbia University, New York. Available: www.verticalfarm.com
Urban agriculture initiativessuch as the
"vertical farm"address the goal of increased
food security in cities
Source: ADB. Green Cities (Brochure) 2011.
312 Green Cities
Finally, food is an issue for city sustainability planning at the regional
level. Despite what was just said about orange growers, policies should
encourage agricultural investment in the city hinterland to supply food to
the adjacent city. Urban agriculture is also important. Production of food in
green spaces such as allotments, backyards, and balconies within the city
can foster increased food security and reduce the environmental impact of
transporting food from distant regions. Larger green spaces also provide
green lungs that reduce the heat-island effect and lower the amount
of energy required for cooling. In this regard, fuel pricing for transport is
particularly important, since it is only nancially viable to truck or y food
into urban areas from distant locales if fuel is cheap. Regional zoning
discouraging monoculture on large areas also forces farmers to concentrate
on high-value crops. In respect of urban agriculture, start-up costs can also
be subsidized or, preferably, nanced.
Incentives
The use of tax revenues and fees should be planned and implemented in
a transparent manner. Again in principle, fees for service should be claimed
by the enterprises providing the service, and any asset sales should provide
capital for continuing improvement of the service in question. Yes, this is
obvious, but parts of the highway network in the United States are being sold
off to pay recurrent costs outside of the transport sector, and water enterprises
in Indonesia have been raided by local government for their cash ows.
Tax revenue provides the basis for capital expenditure subsidies required
for green investments that are not nancially viable under any politically
rational pricing system. Metro-leveland even city-region levelagencies
that can achieve such nancial management are notable by their absence
in Asia, as well as many other countries. Effective planning, oversight,
and enabling legislation are required at the provincial/state level for such
entities to function effectively. In cases in which a city region or mega-region
crosses provincial borders, national action may be required. New green
cities may need even more support and special structures if they are to
be made viable in the long run. For example, Masdar (Box 7.5) requires
substantial national subsidies. Such support is potentially transparent and
accountable, as Masdar is set up as a corporation that offers education
and other environmental services. In this sense, Masdar is the ultimate
company town.
At the level of the city and city neighborhood, the basis for green
development is laid in planning. This is the case even for existing
neighborhoods that are badly planned, poorly serviced, haphazardly
developed, and badly maintained. Rehabilitation and retrotting that allows
the use of green technologies is possible, provided that actions are planned
and executed in a coordinated manner. Examples include the Lower Lea
Financing Sustainable Cities 313
Box 7.5 Masdar City
Masdar is a planned city being built by the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company,
a subsidiary of Mubadala Development Company. The city is designed to be
a hub for clean-tech companies. Masdar City aims to achieve its goals of zero
net carbon impact by
harnessing energy from several renewable sources;
ventilation design that takes advantage of natural sea breezes and protection
from the desert climate by a wall and wind towers;
allowing at least 80% of its water to be recycled, with a low-energy
desalinization plant providing the remainder;
recycling or composting of solid waste; and
personal rapid transit pods that run on magnetic tracks to reduce or
replace the need for cars.
Currently, the Masdar City project relies heavily on investments initiated with
start-up funding by the Abu Dhabi government. The project has invested in
wind, solar, and other energy generation projects worldwide as a means of
providing long-term funding. In fact, the Masdar Clean Tech Fund has raised
$265 million for investment and is looking to build a diversified venture capital
and private equity portfolio that will include some of the worlds most promising
and pioneering clean-tech and renewable energy companies. The fund is made
up of commitments from the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company, the Consensus
Business Group, Credit Suisse, and Siemens AG. In the future, it is likely that
these investments will help Masdar become self-sufficient as a company.
Other Masdar-related partnerships include BASF, Bayer, Hansgrohe, and
Siemens, each of which has agreed to locate a research and development
center in the city, and use the partnership with Masdar Institute of Science
and Technology (MIST) to help advance clean technology and test their
products locally. Masdar cemented its importance on the world stage by
securing the support of the International Renewable Energy Agency, which will
move its headquarters to Masdar City as a show of support for the project.
Sources: Masdar City. Master Plan. http://www.masdarcity.ae/en/; The Economist. 2008. Masdar
plan. 4 December. http://www.economist.com/node/12673433?story_id=12673433; M. Picow. 2010.
Abu Dhabis Masdar Clean Tech Fund Closes First Fund At $265 Million. Green Prophet. 3 February.
http://www.greenprophet.com/2010/02/masdar-clean-tech-fund/
Valley in East London and the Pyrmont redevelopment in Sydney, where old
warehouses and dilapidated housing have been replaced by high-quality
urban development. These redevelopment projects required a local area
agency with eminent domain powers and an ability to raise nance, as well
as planning and zoning powers.
314 Green Cities
Box 7.6 Pyrmont Redevelopment
Pyrmont, which lies to the west of Sydneys central business district, was
historically a working-class suburb. As such, it mainly comprised industrial
enterprises served by its docks, and working-class terraced housing. Pyrmont
and adjoining Ultimo were the location of the citys wool storage, sugar
refining, flour milling, and shipping industries for more than a century. In
addition, much of the yellow block sandstone used in the construction of
early Sydney buildings came from Pyrmont. But as industry moved out, both
Pyrmonts population and the area in general fell into decline.
Government-owned property was particularly concentrated in Pyrmont-
Ultimo. The asset realization potential of developing the governments land
holdings, particularly for commercial development, and the potential for major
urban consolidation, led the government to develop an urban strategy for the
area, which was named the City West Urban Renewal Program. This program
transformed Pyrmont into a lively inner-city urban community. Further, the old
area was connected with the Darling Harbour redevelopment area and the
central business district, thus further elevating its status in Sydney.
The New South Wales Government sold $97 million worth of property in
Pyrmont, thus making it available for private sector redevelopment, making
Pyrmont one of the largest land sell-offs in Australias history.
The City West Development Corporation was established to oversee Pyrmonts
development, to administer government sites, and to ensure provision of
major infrastructure. The corporation was significantly funded by the federal
governments Building Better Cities program. The injection of more than
$240 million of Commonwealth and state funding, mainly for new services,
roadways, and infrastructure, as well as a joint effort by the public and private
sectors, have made Pyrmont what it is todayone of Sydneys most sought-
after, livable, high-density districts.
Sources: City of Sydney. 2007. 2007 Local Action Plan City West. The villages of Pyrmont
and Ultimo; G. Searle. 2007. Sydneys Urban Consolidation Experience: Power, Politics and
Community. Urban Research Program. Research Paper 12. Brisbane: Grifth University.
Zoning is a delicate weapon in the planners arsenal. To work at all, it
must be enforced. That said, rigorous enforcement of inappropriate zoning
is counterproductive in that it both provides a signicant incentive for
corruption and often runs counter to sustainability principles. For example,
attempting to enforce residential-only zoning in a dense, mixed-use Asian
city will not work. In addition, it will not only encourage bribery of enforcers
but also run counter to a key tenant of urban sustainability, which is the
principle of minimizing the need to travel, and thus to consume energy.
Financing Sustainable Cities 315
On the other hand, use of oor area ratios to encourage green
development can be effective. Zoning of areas around public transport
corridors and nodes to encourage high-density development is effective,
but is often hated by established owners in leafy suburbs that surround
a railway station. The NIMBY syndrome is alive and well in Sydney, and
can inuence politicians to blunt this effective tool that is at the disposal of
planners. Site coverage ratios can encourage provision of green or open
space, but unsubtle application of such rules sometimes results in sterile,
cold plazas.
Other zoning regulations, combined with fees, can achieve positive
environmental outcomes. Such zoning regulations applied in Sydneys
central business district and Inner Frankfurt am Main do not provide for
commuter parking spaces in new buildings. Similarly, on-street parking is
not allowed. Likewise, developers are charged for cars they attract to the
city, and the resulting revenue is used to build peripheral public parking
that charges substantial amounts for the privilege of parking a car. This has
the double benet of raising public revenue and discouraging people from
bringing their cars to the city.
Subsidies
Readers may note that much of this section deals with planning, not nance.
This is important. The type, size, and use of a building are fundamental
determinants of its economic valuein real estate terms, its yield as an
investment. This value is the basis on which nancing for construction can
be obtained, but also the basis of revenue from which taxes may be taken
to build and maintain infrastructure and services and to encourage green
investment through subsidies.
Subsidies are another double-edged sword in the urban managers
arsenal. Inappropriately used and administered, they can be counterproductive
and vehicles for corruption. Intelligently and transparently used, they can
be effective indeed. Increasing oor-area ratios for green buildings is
effectively a subsidy. However, the technique can also be applied to specic
investments. Rebates (subsidies that refund part of the cost of an investment
or activity after money has been spent) are easier to monitor and verify than
are subsidies paid in advance of money being spent. As a result, they can
and have been given for a wide range of green investments such as installing
insulation in buildings, solar photovoltaic cells, water-saving appliances, and
use of public transport. Subsidies can be, and sometimes should be, applied
in ways other than rebates. In many cases, they should be targeted and set
at levels that change behavior without creating a windfall prot. Arguably,
Spanish and German subsidies for solar power fell into the latter category.
316 Green Cities
Box 7.7 Effective Subsidies: Water Supply to Manilas
Low-Income Households
In the late 1990s, only 26% of Manilas
populace had access to affordable and
clean tap water. Others had to pay the high
prices charged by water vendors, queue
for hours at public faucets and community
wells, or tap illegal connections. In some
cases, informal settlers were unable to apply
for regular water connections because they
lacked proof of land ownership.
Between 2007 and 2009, 10,642 water
connections were made using a Global
Partnership on Output-Based Aid (GPOBA)
connection subsidy funded by the World
Bank. Manila Water, a private utility, designed
the innovative Tubig Para Sa Barangay
(TPSB) (Water for the Community)
program, which enabled marginalized
households to connect to a piped-in
water supply. Under this program, the World Bank provided funds to subsidize
the cost-of-connection fees of customers who lived in low-income communities.
The total connection charge per household was $167, of which each household
contributed $36 in installments paid over 36 months. GPOBA contributed
the remaining $131. The GPOBA subsidy was paid directly to Manila Water
Company as a single payment, on condition of independent verification of
three months satisfactory service delivery. In turn, Manila Water provided the
water at reduced prices.
To accommodate the ill-defined streets and dense makeshift housing in
the low-income settlements served by the TPSB program, an underground
water pipe was brought to each settlement and connected to a cluster of
meters. Inhabitants made their own household connections, and were given
36 months to pay the subsidized fee that covered the cost of the households
pipes and individual meters. Water costs were one-fifth of what they had paid
previously. Further, the reduced contamination levels in the water provided
under the program resulted in an 80% drop in the incidence of diarrhea.
To date, more than 1.6 million people have benefitted from the program in that
they now enjoy water supplied right from individual taps 24 hours per day. By
charging affluent customers proportionately more for the water they consumed,
the TPSB program provided access to excellent quality drinking water to
Filipinos who could not afford a full-service connection. This cross-subsidy was
thus financed through water tariffs that provided 50% of Manila Waters total
water-utility income from the 20% of the systems users who were more affluent.
Sources: Manila Water. 2009. Manila Water: Invests in the Future. http://www.manilawater.com/
section.php?section_id=4&category_id=23&article_id=35; R. Simpson. 2012. Lessons Learned from
PPIAF Activities: Pricing and Affordability in Essential Services. Technical Notes 4. Washington, DC:
PublicPrivate Infrastructure Advisory Facility.
A woman inspecting household water
meters. Low-income households now enjoy
access to water supply through subsidies
via output-based aid (OBA) schemes.
Source: ADB.
Financing Sustainable Cities 317
Subsidies can also be effectively used as a way to reduce the cost of a
green investment that would otherwise not be undertaken. Such subsidies
are called viability gap subsidies because they ll in the gap between the
cost of an environment-friendly investment and the amount that community
users can afford to pay for it.
Public transport subsidies are nearly ubiquitous since its provision is
an expensive business. Even busways, which are relatively cheap, cost
$10 million per kilometer, depending on standards and capacity. Metro
systems requiring ROW acquisition or expensive tunneling are typically 10
times more costly than are busways. Given that environment-conscious
policy makers want to maximize the use of public transport, raising
Box 7.8 Land Value Capture for Investment in Copenhagen
Land value capture is particularly useful in relatively undeveloped areas that
benefit greatly from provision of new infrastructure. Copenhagens metro,
completed in 2007 and considered to be one of Scandinavias most ambitious
transport infrastructure projects, provides an excellent example of land value
capture. The restad Development Corporation (ODC) was established with
the dual goal of building the metro in Copenhagen and developing the restad
area. This area is jointly owned by the national government (45% share) and
the municipality of Copenhagen (55% share).
The area developed is about 600 meters wide and 5 kilometers long, and is
situated about 2 kilometers from the city center of Copenhagen. The project
closely interconnects infrastructure, land-use development, and financing. The
total cost of the project is estimated at 1.7 billion euros. By putting infrastructure
in place, the sale of land to private investors was facilitated, and this in turn was
important to the financing of the metro system.
continued on next page
Transport infrastructure investments such as the Copenhagen metro were made possible through
land value capture.
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318 Green Cities
fares to the point at which people do not want to use public transport is
counterproductive. Thus, capital subsidies are often deployed to defray
costs. This has the advantage of being a one-time, transparent subsidy.
Other arrangements involving private sector provision that depend on
subsidy are also possible (Box 7.8). In Hong Kong city (Hong Kong, China),
public transport has run at a prot, but only by providing cross-subsidies
(i.e., subsidies to a money-losing part of an operation provided from a
protable part). In the case of Hong Kong citys metro, prots from property
development operations fund a substantial portion of the costs of running
the trains, although this has recently been curtailed due to intense lobbying
on the part of certain developers (T.E. 2011, Yeung 2008).
Catalyst Funding
Catalyst funding is supplied for the purpose of initiating an investment which,
though nancially viable in the long run, cannot, for a variety of reasons,
obtain capital funding. Catalyst funding can take many forms and can be in
any proportion to the total capital cost of the initiative concerned, depending
on the sector funded and the capital market concerned. For example,
reducing GHG emissions to the same level through investment in mitigation
initiatives in various sectors requires widely differing amounts of funding,
the greatest amount being required in the power sector (Figure 7.3). Given
the long-dated investments involved and the cost per unit of GHG reduction
in this sector, it is unlikely that GHG abatement would occur in the absence
of signicant increases in tariffs or subsidies. Due to the magnitude of the
investment required, only cities such as Tokyo have sufcient resources to
subsidize such investment, even with the support of the national government.
Conversely, the investment required for GHG mitigation measures relating to
buildings, waste management, and public transport is negative over the long
term, indicating that the nancial gains from increases in energy efciency
Box 7.8 continued
ODC directly managed the restad land. It likewise arranged loans on
commercial terms that were a joint liability of the national government and
the municipality. Furthermore, it designed, built, and initiated the new metros
operations in addition to planning and constructing other infrastructure
projects, and then subsequently sold the land to developers and investors. The
corporation uses the profits from these land sales to repay the loan, instead of
using real estate tax revenues and profits from operation of the metro system.
Source: OECD. 2007. Infrastructure to 2030. Volume 2: Mapping Policy for Electricity, Water and
Transport. Paris.
Financing Sustainable Cities 319
brought about through these GHG mitigation measures ultimately outweigh
the nancial costs of undertaking such measures.
Examples of such investments include building energy-efciency
measures, fuel switching from gasoline to liquid natural gas, and investments
in waste-to-energy plants. In such cases (e.g., those enclosed in the dotted
line in Figure 7.3), the long-term protability of the investment means that
only small subsidies or nancing windows are required, making them efcient
investments for metro regions and cities. In the case of cities, sometimes only
a small investment is required to induce signicant changes in investment
behavior. This is particularly true when such investments signal a long-
term commitment to stimulating investment in green infrastructure, and
even more so if such investments are supported by the national or regional
government. Californias Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) nancing
scheme is an excellent example of such innovative nance (Box 7.9).
Green investments that produce long-term net nancial gains, such as
those that appear within the dotted line in Figure 7.3, occur in developed and
developing countries alike. Even in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) where
electricity is subsidized, the nancial gains from undertaking such measures
exceed the cost of undertaking them. Nevertheless, banks are reluctant to
lend money for such investments in such a new and policy-dependent market.
To demonstrate the viability of such investments, ADB provided a guarantee
for the Pudong Development Banks energy-efciency facility (Box 7.10).
Figure 7.3 Relative Magnitude of Investment
to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Source: ICLEI. 2010. Cities in a Post-2012 Climate Policy Framework. ICLEI Global Reports. Bonn.

Power
Iron and Steel
Chemicals
Forestry
Petroleum and
Gas
Waste
Agriculture
Cement
Buildings
Transport
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
-5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80
320 Green Cities
Box 7.9 Californias Property Assessed Clean Energy initiative
More often than not, the costs of investing in solar photovoltaic systems,
energy-efficient windows, and insulating a home will not be recovered when
the home is to be sold. These up-front costs are considered to be one of the
most significant barriers to solar and energy-efficiency retrofits.
In the United States, property owners can finance energy-efficiency and
renewable-energy measures in homes and commercial buildings without the
need for government subsidies. This is because the Property Assessed Clean
Energy (PACE) initiative enables them to mortgage these improvements,
and thus to pay only for the benefits they derive during the period they own
the property in question.
Originally known as a Special
Energy Financing District or
on-tax-bill solar and efficiency
financing, PACE was first
proposed under the Monterey
Bay Regional Energy Plan in 2005.
However, the first PACE program
was implemented in Berkeley,
California to help achieve the San
Francisco Bay Areas climate-
related goals. While California
was the first state to pass
legislation for PACE financing,
the program has since covered
more than 16 states. Such
legislation allows localities within the state concerned to establish PACE
financing programs.
In jurisdictions where PACE legislation is applicable, local governments
(through municipal financing districts or finance companies) offer a specific-
purpose bonds to investors. The proceeds from the sale of such bonds are
then lent to owners of both residential and commercial properties for the
purpose of retrofitting these properties for energy efficiency. These loans are
then repaid over the term specified (typically 15 or 20 years) through annual
property-tax-bill assessments that are spread over approximately 20 years.
However, the property owner benefits from the energy-cost savings from such
improvements, which ultimately result in net financial gains.
Sources: Property Assessed Clean Energy Advocate. PACENOw. Solar Financing for Residential
Solar Panels.
The PACE nancing program provides incentives
to property owners to install solar panels and other
energy efciency retrots.
Source: AFP.
Financing Sustainable Cities 321
Summary
Despite the obstacles they face in doing so, developing-country governments
have committed themselves to moving toward long-term sustainability of the
environment and natural resource base. That said, to date they have focused
heavily on pollution abatement. This is in part because the economic costs
of air and water pollution in many developing countries have constrained
growth. For example, the annual cost of air and water pollution in Jakarta
during the late 1990s has been estimated to exceed $1 billion per year, the
corresponding gure for Bangkok exceeding $2 billion (ADB 2008a). More
recent studies have estimated the annual economic costs of water pollution
at $1.5 billion for Indonesia, $320 million for the Philippines, $290 million for
Box 7.10 Asian Development Bank Support for Shanghai Pudong
Development Bank Lending for Green Building
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is providing partial credit guarantees to
Shanghai Pudong Development Bank (SPD Bank) to support private sector
financing of energy-efficient buildings across the Peoples Republic of China
(PRC). SPD Bank is the first PRC partner in a program set up by ADB to
encourage financial institutions to lend to companies seeking to retrofit old
buildings so that they use less energy, or to construct green buildings that
optimize energy and water efficiency. Retrofitting old buildings in this manner
typically leads to energy savings of 20%40%.
Under its Energy Efficiency Multi-Project
Financing Program, ADB is partnering
with Johnson Controls, a private sector
energy management company listed
on the New York Stock Exchange.
Johnson Controls identifies buildings
with energy-savings potential, while ADB
shares project credit risks with financial
institutions.
The PRC government is keen to reduce
the greenhouse gas emissions that have
accompanied the countrys rapid rise
in energy consumption in recent years. Given the countrys rapid rate of
urbanization, improving the energy efficiency of buildings will significantly cut
the emissions that contribute to climate change. However, companies have
found it difficult to access finance for such purposes, given the little collateral
they can offer to back loans. For their part, they themselves have little
experience in financing energy-efficiency projects. Listed on the Shanghai
Stock Exchange, SPD Bank was the first PRC domestic bank to offer a full
range of green credit solutions to companies.
Source: ADB. 2011. Press release. Manila. 16 May.
Shanghai Pudong Development (SPD)
Bank provides a range of green credit
solutions to the private sector.
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322 Green Cities
Viet Nam, and $150 million for Cambodia (World Bank 2008a). For the PRC,
estimates of the annual cost of air pollution are in the range 3.5%8% of
gross domestic product (World Bank 2007a).
While the global environmental benets of undertaking initiatives under
the green agenda are widely acknowledged, the fact that they are dispersed
among all of the worlds countries means that they provide an insufcient
incentive for undertaking such initiatives. However, the co-benets of such
initiatives (e.g., the health benets of reducing fossil-fuel use and energy
savings from using energy-efcient lighting or heating) justify undertaking
mitigation initiatives at the national level. The same is true of the co-benets
that result from climate-change mitigation initiatives that allow the costs of
saline intrusion, climate-related disasters, and food insecurity to be avoided.
Currently, schemes for promoting investment in environment-related
initiatives in developing countries largely comprise legislation that species
environmental standards. However, the fact that such standards are seldom
enforced negates any value that their provision was intended to provide. An
excellent example of this is the Philippines Republic Act 9003 (the Ecological
Solid Waste Law), which species waste collection and recycling standards
that are even more stringent than those in effect in the OECD countries.
Because of the mismatch between the stringency of such standards and
the Philippines corresponding enforcement capability, the efforts of activist
lawyers who have been taking local governments to court for noncompliance
provide the only exception to the countrys citizenry completely ignoring them.
Even in cases in which enforcement of standards is constrained by
availability of funding, positive incentives such as tax breaks can be effective,
provided that the investor benetting from the tax break concerned is in the
formal sector and therefore actually pays the tax. In the informal sector where
tax evasion is nearly ubiquitous, subsidies can provide effective positive
incentives. However, such subsidies must avoid elite captureor missing their
target group entirelyif they are to be effective in bringing about the change
in behavior desired. Effective use of subsidies in providing positive incentives
for behavior change thus requires that all aspects of the market concerned
be fully understood, so that appropriate types and levels of subsidy can be
provided at the microeconomic level. For example, subsidies for encouraging
installation of solar photovoltaic panels depend not only on the level of the
direct subsidy itself but as well on the level of electricity tariffs in general and
the relative level of any relevant feed-in tariffs.
This latter example suggests that fostering sound nancing by public
utility companies, as well as subnational-level government agencies that
provide public services, is an important role of the national government. In
this regard, distorted consumer behavior and signicant waste of precious
resources are the costs of pricing regimes that collectively fail to recover the
Financing Sustainable Cities 323
full cost of provision of such services. For example, not charging for energy
used in providing district heating removes any incentive utility companies
may have for installing thermostats in residences. In such cases, the
preferred method of regulating indoor temperatures in subzero weather is
to simply open windows. Experiments in market-based incentives are under
way in some of ADBs developing member countries. The PRCs energy
trading scheme provides an excellent example of such experiments.
Box 7. 11 Establishing National Carbon Markets: The Cap-and-Trade
Scheme in the Peoples Republic of China
The Peoples Republic of China is planning a trial energy cap-and-trade
scheme that uses market forces to reduce fossil fuel consumption, as a means
of lowering the countrys carbon intensity to 40%45% of 2005 levels by the
year 2020. Pilot programs in 13 cities and provinces are planned that allow
the trading of energy savings achieved through undertaking energy-efficiency
initiatives. Under the scheme, the government will impose a hard limit on total
energy use that would cap consumption from all sources at the equivalent of
4 billion tons of coal by 2015. The countrys 5-year development plan for 2011
2015 also incorporates tax changes for encouraging greater energy efficiency.
Sources:National Development and Reform Commission, Peoples Republic of China; C. Buckley.
2011. [the Peoples Republic of] China to launch energy cap-and-trade trials in green push. Reuters.
Sources of Private Sector Financing Currently
Available
The prospects for developing countries in attracting private sector funding
for environment-related initiatives are examined in the following section, as
are ways of ensuring that such resources are channeled into sustainable
activities. To date, private sector investment in green initiatives has primarily
occurred through three mechanisms: foreign direct investment, private equity/
debt funds including socially responsible investing, and local retail nance.
Foreign Direct Investment
Foreign direct investment (FDI) is driven by short- and medium-term
commercial interests, as well as the long-term plans of corporations (World
Bank, UNEP, and IMF 2002). Because of their relatively low levels of capital
utilization, investments in developing countries potentially offer higher rates
of return overall as compared to investments in higher-income countries.
Markets in numerous sectors in industrialized countries are increasingly
324 Green Cities
competitive. Thus, investment in such venues tends to deliver low and
diminishing rates of return. Further, the OECD countries aging populations
suggest limited prospects for long-term growth, and thus a corresponding
lack of prospects for investor rates of return driven by expanding demand
for goods and services. Thus, in these latter markets, prots can only be
maintained through cost cutting. This contrasts sharply with the relatively
low wage rates and cost structures in developing countries that provide
ample room for higher rates of return to investors, particularly in the face of
rapidly increasing demand for goods and services driven by rapid growth in
both population and per-capita income levels. Thus, developing countries
are seen as key future markets in the long-term plans of most corporations,
a fact that invariably piques the interest of investors.
The environmental impacts of FDI can be both positive and negative.
The potential negative impacts of FDI include the following:
Increased pollution levels and community dislocation, as FDI in some
circles is thought to cause polluting activities to migrate from developed
to developing countries where enforcement of social and environmental
standards is relatively lax.
Inefcient policy governing investment resulting from foreign investors
manipulating policy making so as to gain an undue commercial
advantage or special privilege that ultimately impacts the environment
and natural resource base in a negative way.
The potential positive impacts of FDI include the following:
Many multinational corporations adhere to more stringent standards
regarding working conditions and environmental performance than do
local corporations. Thus, many larger corporations now report on a
triple-bottom-line basis that documents their environmental and social
as well as their economic performance.
Many companies that utilize FDI use capital equipment that embodies
state-of-the-art technology, and thus more environmentally friendly and
resource-efcient, improving environmental performance relative to
other rms.
The benets from the above factors that accrue to the local population
include higher living standards and, with this, education and awareness
of the environment. Some companies even undertake environmentally
positive corporate social responsibility activities in their host communities.
In assessing private sector investment opportunities in the developing
world, political risk is often a primary consideration. In the case of urban
infrastructure projects, for example, local authorities generally lack
Financing Sustainable Cities 325
international credit rating or performance record upon which the private
sector can base a judgment of creditworthiness. Changing political
leadership at the local-authority level and at the national level can create
risks of breach of contract, currency inconvertibility, and expropriation. In
the worst case, war or civil unrest can put the assets and the private sectors
ability to operate at risk.
Innovative approaches combining FDI with ofcial development
assistance (ODA) could rebalance critical political risks in a manner that
promotes private ows to a broader group of countries. There has recently
occurred a signicant shift in donor perception of the role of ODA, with
many donor governments viewing the private sector as a potential partner
in transferring both technology and skills. Donors have also developed a
strong interest in new types of publicprivate partnerships (PPPs).
The development of new types of publicprivate partnerships creates a
number of operational challenges for both aid agencies and private sector
partners alike, which include
balancing private sector interests with those of the community as well as
aid agencies when awarding ODA;
ensuring rigorous competitive assessment and full transparency in
bidding processes, while avoiding bureaucratic delays; and
dealing with programmatic conicts of interest between individual
companies and aid agencies.
The World Business Council for Sustainable Development has promoted
this vision of an increased role for publicprivate partnerships in providing
nance to developing countries, a vision that has likewise been endorsed by
the Group of Twenty High-Level Panel on Infrastructure Provision. Some key
actions are needed to make the vision a reality, such as
supporting good governance through joint capacity-building programs
to improve the understanding and skills of civil servants in relation to
the enabling environment needed to attract sustainable investment and
promote growth;
improving institutional infrastructure by creating a better base for
development of investment vehicles in developing countries, capacity-
building in the identication and implementation of pilot projects for the
Clean Development Mechanism and other post-Kyoto mechanisms; and
supporting development of local nance for such initiatives, especially
for small and medium-sized enterprises and households.
326 Green Cities
Private Investment and Equity/Debt Funds Including
Socially Responsible Investment
Financial institutions. Producers and consumers are increasingly willing
to invest in, and to buy, green products. But often, because nanciers
see such investment as being unproven, they are reluctant to invest in the
manufacture of such products. However, increasing numbers of private
equity and debt funds are targeting green investments that range from
wastewater treatment to solar energy. Central to upscaling such investment
is a more supportive enabling framework within the global and national
capital markets.
Green nance must inuence all aspects of consumption and
investment. To do that, green priorities must permeate the range of products
offered by the nancial system. This includes the banking system and the
wholesale-funds markets that supply the longer-term nancing needed for
environmental investments. Tax deductibility of payments (applicable to
either total payments or interest) in part or in full is the usual mechanism
for governments promoting these priorities directly. The indirect method
is to increase the price of noncompliance for consumers and industry,
by increasing prices of non-green actions (e.g., through a carbon tax).
Financing of green investments then becomes more attractive. The major
areas of attention in this regard, together with examples of specic nancial
products, are depicted in Figure 7.4.
Figure 7.4 demonstrates that many areas of interest to nancial
markets inuence the greenness of the economy. The four key areas in
this regard are retail banking, corporate banking, asset management, and
insurance. In retail banking, perhaps the most important area is mortgage
nance. The purchase of a home is usually the most important investment
a household makes. What is covered under the mortgage? Can additional
green investment be undertaken at purchase? For example, will the
mortgage cover installation of solar photovoltaic panels? This is important to
environmental outcomes at a small scale, but systemic incremental change
is likewise required. The legal form of a mortgage is likewise important. For
example, does a particular mortgage allow repayment for green investments
to be carried over to subsequent homeowners (as under the PACE scheme)?
Allowing consumers to direct their savings or contributions to green purposes
through Green Deposits and Green Credit Cards may become more effective
in the longer run than at present, if such nancial products become more
popular. The Annex lists examples of green retail nancial products.
Project nance through loans and private equity investment are the two
core businesses of the corporate banking eld. They are risk/return driven
Financing Sustainable Cities 327
even more so after the 2008 nancial crisis and the subsequent regulatory
changes of Basel 3 and other initiatives. While some private equity funds
specically target green investment (Annex), all require minimum risk/return
ratios. The newness of many green investments to investors and the lack of
performance record for such initiatives often mean that project nance and
private equity managers feel that risks are greater for such projects, and
that therefore the cost of capital should take account of these risks. Risk
management and mitigation through insurance or other mechanisms thus
become important, as discussed in the case of the Pudong Development
Bank. Funding for green property is now facilitated by the rating of buildings
under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
6
and other
schemes. However, such investments can be highly protable, particularly
in light of the premiums charged for green credentials and the signicant
energy savings they yield relative to abatement costs. Similarly, cities can
encourage such trends through their zoning and taxation powers.
Asset management involves deployment of institutional fundsusually
pension funds and insurance fundsinto debt and/or equity investment. The
rise of responsible investment (Annex), which increasingly incorporates
investment in green initiatives, has made a signicant difference in the
6
http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx?CategoryID=19
Figure 7.4 Major Areas of Interest of Green Finance
Source: Adapted from ICF Consulting Canada, Inc. 2007. Green Financial products and Services:
Current Trends and Future opportunities in North America, Toronto.
Green Finance
Corporate Investment/
Banking
Asset Management Insurance Retail Banking
Home Mortgage
Energy Equity
Loan
Green Deposit
Green Credit
Card
Project Finance
Private Equity
Green Property
Investment
Environmental
Risk Management
Responsible
Investment
Carbon Funds &
Emission Trading
Cat Bond Funds
Green Indices
Auto Insurance
Business
Insurance
Carbon Insurance
Cat Insurance
328 Green Cities
funding of environment-based initiatives. However, deployment of capital
into carbon trading will remain at a small scale until agreement can be
reached on consistent regulation of carbon markets that are at present highly
fragmented. Cat (catastrophe) Bond Funds provide funding for various forms
of insurance. Cities could, in theory, benet from such insurance, but to
date it has proved difcult to structure packages appropriate to the diverse
and complex institutional arrangements required for governing metropolitan
areas, especially in Asia. Other forms of insurance products (Annex) can be
greened by providing some incentive for consumer or business purchase
of more energy- or materials-efcient products. Such incentives, usually
involving a lower cost of cover, may result from analysis indicating lower net
claims for such products or from tax deductibility of premiums.
Capital market systems. Green investments are often nancially viable
in the medium or long term. This is particularly true of energy-efciency
and mitigation actions. However, this viability depends on the tariff
regime concerned, and the carbon benets or subsidy they attract. These
investments generally entail signicant up-front costs, both in terms of capital
and in terms of formulation and structuring of the investment. Because the
expertise required for both formulating and structuring such investments
typically exceeds that possessed by most developing-country enterprises,
in such cases, the nance sector may be called upon not only to nance the
investment but to structure it as well. In such circumstances, recovering the
cost of undertaking these activities may occur through sharing the nancial
benets of the initiative with the company concerned. Typically, developing-
country capital markets have little experience with such investments. Asias
capital markets are highly liquid, but mainly in the short term. The following
points are important in this regard:
Asia has high levels of saving. Thus, while banks and other nancial
institutions have access to money, short-term investments tend to
predominate.
Investment sectors may have no clear regulatory structure, a fact
that causes transactions costs to be high compared with developed
countries.
Few mechanisms exist to encourage institutions holding long-term
funds (e.g., pension funds and life insurance companies) to invest in
infrastructure.
There are few mechanisms for public sector debt nance and public/
private special purpose vehicles.
Inter-jurisdictional coordination issues make project formulation and
structuring difcult.
Financing Sustainable Cities 329
Developed-country pension funds and life insurance companies are
highly liquid and seek long-term investments. However, they are highly risk-
averse and have unrealistic expectations regarding returns.
Green bonds are the rst level of intervention in addressing these issues.
Issued by the World Bank and other institutions, these are often bonds these
institutions would have issued anyway, but are bonds that are tied to green
investments. Capital markets need more support in funding the required
direct investments, such as ADBs funding of the Pudong Development
Bank in support of energy-efciency investments. A more ambitious activity
in this regard involves the use of specialized project development and
co-investment funds for leveraging private sector funds, as in ADBs Climate
PublicPrivate Partnership Fund that was initiated jointly with the United
Kingdoms Department for International Development.
The purpose of this fund is to leverage private equity and debt funding
of green investment by addressing the risk/return issues associated with
green investments. It does this through three mechanisms. First, it extends
ADBs halo effect to investments either directly through co-investment in
particular projects, or indirectly through its investment in funds. Second, it
has the capacity to mix grant or guarantee funds from other facilities to reduce
risk in specic projects. Third, it can assist in the efcient development and
structuring of projects using established project development mechanisms
such as ADBs Cities Development Initiative for Asia (CDIA), which assesses
and addresses risks such as social and environmental risks in particular.
Figure 7.5 The Operational Framework of the Climate PublicPrivate
Partnership Fund
ADB = Asian Development Bank, DFID = Department for International Development of the
United Kingdom, FM = fund manager, GP = general partner, LP = limited partner, P = project.
Source: World Economic Forum. 2011.
Donors ADB, 3rd Party FM
Fund Investments Co-Investments
GP1
GP1
GP1
GP1
GP1
GP1 Private Equity
Fund
ADB, DfID, Other LPs
Risk
Mitigation
Project Development
Facility
P1 P2 P3
330 Green Cities
Responsible investment. Socially responsible investment (SRI) is based
on the concept that investmentsin this case, environment-related
investmentscan create positive and effective social change.
7
In principle,
such investment is sustainable, as it pays participants to continue (and
perhaps extend or improve on) the change initiated by the investment. It
combines attention to the rate of return with concern for social values. SRI
is a potential mechanism for channeling additional funds to the developing
world. SRI has grown rapidly in both Europe and North America, and the
Japanese market is now emerging. The ethical investment market in the
United Kingdom grew from $6 billion at the end of 2001 to an estimated
$17.8 billion in 2011 (EIRIS 2011). At present, the United States is the
worlds largest SRI market, estimated at $3.07 trillion under management
(Social Investment Forum 2010). Despite its recent impressive growth, SRI
faces numerous quantitative and qualitative challenges. Integrating social,
environmental, and ethical criteria into the nancial assessment of business
is challenging.
Initially, SRI approaches focused largely on negative liststhe screening
out of businesses involved in, for example, tobacco, alcohol, weapons, or
animal-testing activities. Recent years have seen a denite movement to a
greater appreciation of businesses that build value by integrating a sustainable
development approach into their core business model and offering services
or products specically designed to meet the environmental and social, as
well as economic, needs of clients. Furthermore, since 2008, markets have
become somewhat more realistic regarding the returns expectedmore
in line with the potential earnings from viable environmental infrastructure
projects.
A variety of market indexes have been developed to allow individual
and institutional investors to track the developing SRI investment sector,
and the whole SRI eld is set to grow further. At present, SRI involvement in
developing countries is embryonic at best. SRI approaches typically focus
on publicly traded companies listed on stock markets. In the developing
world, few companies are listed, thus limiting the applicability of SRI. Efforts
to take the SRI approach into the developing world in a more systematic way
are emerging.
SRI approaches could alleviate some of the concerns of foreign investors
investing in developing countries. Companies that meet SRI criteria and have
the knowledge and internal systems to enable them to effectively manage
risk (whether social, nancial, or environmental) will be in a stronger position
to avoid potential pitfalls, to manage stakeholder relations and expectations
effectively, and therefore to capture new markets and manage growth more
efciently. Social risks in particular are often intangible and harder to put a
7
Adapted from World Bank, UNEP, and IMF (2002).
Financing Sustainable Cities 331
nancial valuation on; yet, they can have signicant impact on the value and
branding of a company, and thus on the viability of an investment, should
they be mismanaged. Skills in assessing such risk are built up over time,
and asset managers need to develop these skills if they are to manage risk
systematically rather than subjectively, and to place indicative nancial values
on these risks in a way that makes sense to the market. Risk management
including environmental risk is itself thus a critical component of SRI.
The Association for Sustainable and Responsible Investment in Asia
(ASrIA) was formed in 2000 as a not-for-prot association dedicated to
promoting SRI in Asian capital markets. ASrIA aims to increase momentum
for sustainable investing by raising awareness and providing information;
facilitating the provision of high-quality SRI products and services; driving
the development of policies within both the nancial and public sectors; and
developing an outreach program to educate the Asian investment industry
in SRI techniques and practices in South Africa. In 20012002, the African
Institute of Corporate Citizenship explored the prospects for SRI in South
Africa, and in June 2002, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange introduced an
SRI index.
Retail Finance for Green Investments by Local Small and
Medium-Sized Enterprises and Households
While multinationals and large corporations may have difculty in accessing
green nance for a variety of reasons, their ability to negotiate with nancial
institutions and the transaction costs in doing so are generally within their
capacity. The same cannot be said for SMEs and private households in
developing member countries (World Bank, UNEP, and IMF 2002). These
enterprises and the households that own and work in them often comprise
the majority of the economy and the bulk of total energy use. Thus, actions to
help them nance environmental investments are of high priority. However,
their special characteristics need to be taken into account when planning
action. In this regard, the following points are of particular importance:
SMEs often operate on thin prot margins that leave little room for even
the bare minimum of investment. Undertaking investments that, for
them, have high transactions costs, long payback periods (if at all), and
require scarce managerial talent and time (all of which are characteristics
of environment-related and energy-efciency projects) is unfeasible. Yet,
these are the companies that have, in aggregate, the greatest impact
on the environment. Ways of reducing transaction costs, shortening
payback periods or at least periods where net cash ow is marginal or
negative, and building awareness and capacity are needed.
332 Green Cities
The same is true of households, particularly low-income households.
Their decisions regarding shelter, cooking, heating, cooling, and
transport are driven by least-cost options. Any other strategy further
constrains investment in a business, education, or health, all of which
are essential for moving a family out of poverty. The same imperatives
thus apply: reducing risk-adjusted cost and transactions costs, and
simplicity.
Thus, in addition to technology which is affordable, nancing solutions
are needed that are
1) either low-cost or incremental (meaning small loans, perhaps even at
higher interest rates) and appropriate to the volatile cash ows of many
informal entrepreneurs and households; and
2) easily accessible both in physical terms (i.e., they are near the place of
work or home or on mobile devices) and in terms of the bureaucratic
requirements for access.
The e-trike project provides an example of how such constraints can be
overcome (Box 7.12).
Successful alternative nance approaches (traditionally micronance)
can empower individuals and micro-, small, and medium-sized businesses
to foster sustainable livelihoods in lower-income communities. Widespread
deployment of capital through these approaches in developing countries
could contribute signicantly to a virtuous circle of investment, benet, and
reinvestment at the community level. Such nance has the ability to deliver
the requisite capital, although care is needed to ensure that it is spent in
ways that contribute to sustainable development.
Despite some recent setbacks, there is a growing body of evidence drawn
from the micronance experience of many countries that if programs are
structured appropriately, borrowers that were previously thought un-
creditworthy are not only able to pay for their microcredit but derive signicant
nonnancial benets as well. Once a dynamic cycle of sustainable livelihoods
is created within a community, the collective ability to pay for clean water
and secure electricity, among other basic necessities, is enhanced. Obvious
benets stemming from such a cycle include, among others, signicant
time savings and health from the provision of clean water, enabling greater
economic opportunities and productivity, and educational benets from the
ability to study during evenings.
As the micronance approach has spread into Africa, Latin America,
and economies in transition, it has undergone a metamorphosis, resulting
Financing Sustainable Cities 333
Box 7.12 The e-Trike Project
The records of the Environmental Management Bureau of the Philippines
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) show that there
are over 5 million motorcycle-taxi tricycles in the Philippines, of which
2.8 million are in Metro Manila. They create about 20 million cubic meters of
pollution annually.
The Government of the
Philippines and ADB have
established a National
Electric Vehicle Strategy
to promote the use of
alternative-fuel vehicles
geared toward reduction of
(i) fuel consumption by at
least 2.8%; (ii) the carbon
footprint of the transport
sector in Metro Manila and
other selected cities; and
(iii) air and noise pollution
from the tricycles that ply the streets of these selected areas.
Spearheaded by the Department of Energy (DOE) with an approved cost
of P21.50 billion that will be partially funded by ADB and other official
development assistance sources, the introduction of energy-efficient Electric
Tricycle (E-Trike) Project aims to bolster the governments clean-air program.
The project is intended to provide affordable financing for the acquisition of
e-trikes that are powered by lithium ion batteries. This was the chosen power
source over lead acid batteries, as lithium ion is 100% recyclable. Although
the actual investment is profitable for small operators, finance is not readily
available to them.
With a loan of $400 million in the ADB pipeline, the project aims to provide
100,000 electricity-run tricycles to replace aging and two-stroke gasoline-fed
units within 5 years, with an initial rollout of 20,000 units in the first 23 years.
The e-trikes will be acquired by target local government units with financing
from the Land Bank of the Philippines over the projects 5-year implementation
period, and distributed to tricycle operators/ drivers through a lease-to-
own arrangement by the local government. Initially pilot-tested in Puerto
Princesa City in Palawan, the project has expanded to target the local
governments of Metro Manila, Boracay in Aklan, Cabanatuan City in Nueva
Ecija, and Davao City.
Sources: National Economic and Development Authority. 2012. ICC-Cabcom approved four
ODA projects on road improvement, transportation. 21 February; Electric Tricycles. http://www.
electrictricycle.net; R. B. Bundang. 2012. Solon seeks inquiry into tax exemption and government
subsidies provided in electric tricycle project of DOEADB. 2 April.
The e-Trike exhibit during the 2011 ADB Asian Urban
Forum. Project nancing was made via an ADB loan while its
distribution to tricycle drivers will be through lease-to-own
arrangement by the local governments.
Source: ADB Urban Community of Practice. 2011.
334 Green Cities
in a broader range of approaches tailored to regional circumstances.
Although an increasing number of successful micronance approaches are
emerging worldwide, there is a clear need to scale up the overall impact of
micronance, building on the models that are commercially viable. To do so,
a number of reforms are needed in the areas and for the following reasons:
Capital requirements imposed by regulators are generally in excess
of prudential requirements implied by credit histories, thus restricting
upscaling potential.
Management and systems need to be upgraded in many cases, which
will result in lower costs.
Many institutions need to increase their scale of operations and/or link
to larger, more established institutions to spread high transaction costs
more widely.
A variety of nancing approaches could be applied to help local nance
institutions achieve these objectives. For example, multilateral development
banks can extend lines of credit or partial credit guarantees to local nancial
institutions. In addition, they, and other ODA providers, can provide additional
equity capitalpotentially also attracting private fundsor some form of
transaction-cost recovery system such that the local nance institution still
takes credit risk, but the incremental cost of making small loans is absorbed
through some other budget, whether international or domestic. Initiatives for
removing or lowering cost hurdles could include capacity-building programs
that enable local nance institutions to bundle or securitize their loan
books and take them to mainstream capital markets.
Multilateral and Bilateral Financing of
Green Investments
Multilateral and bilateral nancing that can be used for green investments,
particularly climate changerelated interventions, encompasses a broad
spectrum of instruments.
8
An overview is provided in Annex. It can include
transfers of public funds in the form of loans or grants, either directly from one
government to another (bilateral aid), or indirectly through nongovernment
organizations or a multilateral agency (multilateral aid). At present, there are
three primary, dedicated multilateral sources of international nance for city
climate change interventions:
8
Adapted from Beltran (Unpublished).
Financing Sustainable Cities 335
Climate Investment Funds (CIFs). Implemented through multilateral
development banks, these funds bridge the nancing and learning gap
between the present and the upcoming international climate change
agreement that will follow the Kyoto Protocol. CIFs comprise two distinct
funds: the Clean Technology Fund and the Strategic Climate Fund, which
are a set of trust funds with a capitalization of more than $6 billion (Climate
Investment Funds website). The Clean Technology Fund offers nancing
for improving fuel-economy standards, accelerating fuel-switching, and
promoting modal shifts in public transport in large metropolitan areas.
The Strategic Climate Fund is an overarching fund that supports targeted
programs, with dedicated funding for the piloting of new approaches
with the potential for scaled-up, transformational action that addresses
specic climate change challenges or sectoral responses.
Global Environment Facility (GEF). This is a partnership of 178
countries and international institutions that addresses climate change
and technology-transfer issues. Since 1991, it has allocated $2.5 billion
and leveraged $17 billion in conancing (World Bank 2010b).
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)-based funds. ADB (Future
Carbon Fund) and the World Bank (Carbon Finance Unit Initiatives) have
funds that pay part of the proceeds (usually 50%) from the CDM and
post-Kyoto Protocol transfers up-front, rather than upon achievement
of performance-based standards (World Bank 2010d).
The three instruments remain the largest and most commonly utilized
sources of climate change nancing for developing countries. However,
other initiatives, some of which utilize new avenues and channels for funding,
have recently emerged. The following are some of these initiatives:
Multilateral, bilateral, and export credit agencies. These agencies provide
low-cost, long-term loans, conancing, and risk mitigation in funding
infrastructure projects. Most development nance institutions have special funds
and programs catering exclusively to climate change mitigation and adaptation.
They also provide grants and technical assistance in project development and
capacity development, as well as in sharing global best practices.
Bilateral cooperation. Bilateral cooperation and the sharing of technical
capabilities are exemplied in the SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City Project
(SSTEC), in which private consortia
9
of the People's Republic of China (PRC)
and Singaporean companies provided technical assistance and commercial
nancing for the development of an eco-industrial park 40 kilometers from
Tianjin City. SSTEC is intended to be a model eco-city that is energy-
and resource-efcient with low greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, while
9
SinoSingapore Tianjin Eco-City, SSTEC Investment and Development Co. Ltd, and
Keppel Corporation.
336 Green Cities
maintaining economic viability and social harmony. It is built on non-arable
salt land. It thus converts land that is unsuitable for agricultural purposes
into urban land with signicant economic value. Singapore, through its
private investors, has introduced global experience and knowledge into the
design of this eco-city. The design of the SSTEC thus incorporates a mixed-
land-use plan that reduces commuting requirements from outside SSTEC,
and adopts energy-efcient building standardsmore stringent than
corresponding national standardsand as well promotes renewable energy
use. The SSTEC is a pilot city that serves as a sustainable development
model to be replicated in other PRC cities.
Ofcial development assistance (ODA). Funds currently available for
climate change interventions through ODA that are not limited to cities are
estimated at $9 billion per year (World Bank 2010a). This is a small percentage
of total ODA. Developed countries have pledged fast-track resources of
$30 billion from 2010 to 2012, with a further target approaching $100 billion
per year by 2020. The Cancun Agreements mandate that fast-start funds have
a balanced allocation between adaptation and mitigation; are new and
additional; are prioritized for the most vulnerable developing countries, such
as the least developed countries, small-island developing States, and Africa;
and include forestry and investments through international institutions.
Several countries, including Japan and the United States, are channeling
a considerable amount of their funds through export credit agencies and
other publicprivate channels. The CIFs and the GEF are, at present, the
primary multilateral institutions through which other funds are channeled.
ADB will scale up its own nancing for promoting low-carbon and climate-
resilient growth, and will assist its developing member countries in accessing
additional public concessional funds, thus ensuring that they make the most
of private nance.
The major multilateral and bilateral climate funds sources are
10
Global Environment Facility
Clean Technology Funds
Carbon Partnership Facility
Climate Change Program
Climate Change Fund
Carbon Market Initiative
Clean Energy Financing
Partnership Facility
Global Climate Change Fund
Indonesia Climate Change
Trust Fund
Special Climate Change Fund
Nordic Environment Finance
Corporation Carbon Fund
Netherlands Fast-Start Facility
Development and Climate Finance
Hatoyama Initiative
International Climate Initiative
Renewable Energy and Energy
Efciency Partnership
AustraliaIndonesia Facility for
Disaster Reduction
10
This list also includes several funds specically targeted to Indonesia. For example, the
PAKLIM program focuses on supporting climate change initiatives in Indonesia.
Financing Sustainable Cities 337
The Annex lists the multilateral and bilateral climate fund sources and
the sectors that they fund. It should be noted that a number of facilities are
often available to a single country. Figure 7.6 shows the facilities available
to Indonesia.
These ows may be disaggregated into four generic types:
Bilateral government (United Kingdom, Australia, Norway, Japan) grant
funding for specic trust funds that address climate-related issues.
Funding is contingent on reductions in GHG emissions.
Bilateral (France, Japan) and multilateral allocations of capital to funds
established for climate-related investments. These generally comprise
debt investment (i.e., loans).
Bilateral (United States, Australia, United Kingdom, Japan, Germany)
and multilateral technical assistance.
Bilateral (Germany, Japan) and multilateral investment funding of specic
climate-related projects or programs.
Figure 7.6 Sources of Finance for Climate-Related Initiatives Undertaken
in Indonesia
AFD = Agence Franaise de Dveloppement; AusAID = Australian Agency for International Development;
CC = climate change; DFID = Department for International Development of the United Kingdom; FCPF =
Forest Carbon Partnership Facility; FIP = Forest Investment Program; GEF = Global Environment
Facility; ICI = International Climate Initiative; JICA = Japan International Cooperation Agency; MRV
= measurement, reporting, and verication; UN-REDD = United Nations Collaborative Programme on
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries; USAID =
United States Agency for International Development.
Source: World Bank. 2010d. State and Trends of the Carbon Market. Washington, DC.

Total funding: ~$4.35 bn committed over
next several years (G) = grant, (L) = loan
Norway
Letter of Intent
World Bank/JICA/
AFD CC Policy Loan
DFID/AusAID
to Indo CC
Trust Fund
DFID/AFD
to Indo Green
Investment Fund
1 bn (G)
~2 bn (L)
~10 mn (G)
TBD
Office of the President
Government of Indonesia
President
UKP4 REDD+ task
force (led by
Kuntoro)
National Council
on Climate Change
(NCCCC)
Ministry of
Environment
Ministry of
Forestry
Ministry of
Finance
National
Planning Agency
(BAPPENAS)
Indonesia CC
Trust Fund
(ICCTF)
PIPs Indonesia
Green Investment
Fund (IGIF)
DFID/AFD
JICA
KFW
Germany ICI
AusAID
DFID
136 mn (G)
16.5 mn (G & L)
365 mn (G & L)
27 mn (G)
76 mn (G)
12 mn (G)
World Bank
GEF
GTZ
FIP
FCPF
UN-REDD
400 mn (L)
4 mn (G )
10 mn (G)
80 mn (G)
3.6 mn (G)
5.6 mn (G)
Project/programmatic support:
REDD + pilot projects
Capacity building projects
Technical assistance
Support for MRV systems
338 Green Cities
Cities can and should, be aware of the technical assistance facilities under
these mechanisms that can be used in the preparation of investment projects
to be nanced under these same facilities. Operational understanding of the
latter point can be quite a complex matter. However, project development
facilities such as CDIA can act as intermediaries for the city concerned in
accessing such funds.
Financing for Carbon Markets
The term carbon nance refers to investments in GHG emission-reduction
initiatives and the creation of nancial instruments that are tradable in carbon
markets. For example, if carbon-emission reductions can be veried to have
occurred as the result of an activity, then emission reduction credits relating
to those reductions can be sold on the carbon market.
There are two types of carbon markets:
Compliance carbon market. This market was created and is regulated
by mandatory carbon reduction initiatives such as the Kyoto Protocol, of
which the CDM is of relevance to developing countries.
Voluntary carbon market. This market operates on the same principle
as the compliance carbon market. However, it enables organizations,
individuals, and governments to purchase carbon offsets voluntarily.
As of June 2011, 6,416 CDM projects have been registered with a
total annual reduction of 850 million tons of carbon. Wind and hydropower
projects accounted for 49% of all CDM projects. These were followed
biomass energy (12%), methane avoidance (10%), energy-efciency own-
generation (7%), and landll gas initiatives (5%) (IGES 2011). Due to their
intensive capital requirements and relatively low-carbon revenues, transport
initiatives accounted for a mere 0.6% of all CDM projects.
Unfortunately, city authorities have not been able to fully access markets
for carbon credits. Less than 1% of projects registered with the CDM are
credited to cities. There are several reasons:
Climate-change interventions have historically been considered to be
more of a priority for, and the responsibility of, national rather than local
governments.
Cities are generally more concerned with immediate development
priorities, such as expanding access to urban services and slum
upgrading.
Administrative and transaction costs associated with the setting up of
CDM projects in cities have been high as compared with their returns.
Financing Sustainable Cities 339
Of the various initiatives, projects that focus on methane avoidance and
recovery, biomass energy, and energy efciency have the highest chance of
success in obtaining funding. These types of projects have technologies and
CDM methodologies that are globally available, and that embody exibility
for establishing publicprivate partnerships. Most importantly, they fall within
the administrative jurisdiction of cities.
Methane, biomass, and landll projects can provide considerable carbon
revenues to pay off investment costs. While wastewater and transport
projects only contribute a miniscule amount of carbon revenues, they cover
the operational costs of these capital-intensive sectors.
Emerging International Financing Mechanisms for
Climate-Related Initiatives
In addition to multilateral and bilateral funds as well as carbon-market
nancing, there are a number of new and evolving international mechanisms
for nancing climate-related initiatives that are relevant to cities. These include
Nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMAs)
Green bonds,
Responsible funds, and
Post-Kyoto Clean Development Mechanisms.
Nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMAs) comprise a set
of policies and actions by countries aimed at reducing or limiting GHG
emissions as proposed to the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC). NAMAs are expected to be the main vehicle for
mitigation action in developing countries under a future climate agreement
(Bockel, Gentien, and Tinlot 2011; Carpenter 2008).
During the 2007 UNFCCC, the Bali Action Plan recognized the need
for developing countries to fully participate in efforts to reach global
emission reduction goals through NAMAs. This concept was retained under
the Copenhagen Accord during the Copenhagen Climate Conference in
2009, adding that NAMAs would be subject to international measurement,
reporting, and verication. The 2010 Climate Conference in Cancun
reinforced the role of NAMAs and recognized that developing countries
are already contributing and will continue to contribute to global mitigation
through agreements aimed at emission reductions, greater transparency,
forest preservation, and the creation of a green fund for helping to mobilize
much-needed investments throughout the world.
340 Green Cities
Green bonds. In November 2008, the World Bank offered its rst green
bonds to support climate change mitigation and adaptation projects in
developing countries. Green bonds are a standard xed-income product
that offers investors the opportunity to participate in the nancing of green
projects that help mitigate climate change and help countries adapt to its
impacts. These bonds have similar features as regular bonds by the issuing
entity, including credit risk and size (Reichelt 2010).
Responsible funds. Ethical funds pool the money of hundreds of investors
into a single fund, which in turn is invested in the stock market. A range
of social, environmental, or other ethical factors inuence the choice of
investments.
Post-Kyoto Clean Development Mechanisms. The ve major Post-Kyoto
2012 programs that will utilize the CDM protocols to fund green infrastructure
include the Climate Investment Fund (World Bank), the Future Carbon Fund
(Asian Development Bank), the European Union Emissions Trading System
Climate and Energy Package, the Japan alternative CDM mechanism, and
the Republic of Korea Emission Trading Scheme (Department of Energy and
Climate Change website, Climate Investment Funds website, Future Carbon
Fund website, Reuters Africa, 2010).
Experience of Current Global Funds
Current global systems, with the exception of the CDM under the Kyoto
Protocol, are generally ad hoc and have no systemic impact. Many focus
on emotionally pleasing, aesthetically appealing, and conscience-salving
investments. However, from the systemic and technical impact perspective,
these initiatives are nearly useless. The objective of international nancial
structures that nance green growth must be to foster a low-carbon
economy, rather than to make an unsustainable economy pretty.
The CDM did have limited systemic impact. Operating on an objective
basis (i.e., the amount of carbon saved from a particular investment), the
CDM was market-based, although it applied to a limited and regulation-
dependent market. The carbon price as set in Japanese and European
markets has been sufcient to make a signicant difference in the nancial
outcomes of certain types of projects. Methane-generating activities, and
projects designed to reduce methane generated, are often lucrative under
the CDM, and some useful investments in waste disposal resulted from this.
CFC reduction investments were also highly attractive.
Financing Sustainable Cities 341
However, the impact of the CDM on economic structures was limited.
This outcome mainly resulted from the following two factors:
To justify the additionality of its investments, the CDM was highly
regulated and required expensive consultants to set up the project, and
to conduct the baseline studies and monitor the actual outcomes. Such
transaction costs could not be borne by small projects and often, in
developing countries, the technical and nancial capacity to contract,
deploy, and manage such consultants was not present in potential
sponsor institutions, regardless of whether these were public or private.
Arguably, concessions to reduce transaction costs were made. Further,
some sources do exist within institutions such as ADB to nance the
CDM for particular types of projects and particular countries. However,
the impact of these measures is limited.
The investments for which the CDM was available had to be clearly dened
and were thus focused on particular technological improvements to
processes, not on systemic shifts in policy. Although the Programmatic
CDM was instituted toward the end of the protocol period, such projects
were essentially the large-scale rollout of a particular technology (e.g.,
compact uorescent lighting). This gave no room for policy-based
mitigation impacts such as encouraging energy-efcient transit-
oriented development where a high-efciency public transport spine
connects mixed use, high-density neighborhoods of energy-efcient
buildings. Individual investments under such a policy regime (e.g.,
busways) derive only marginal benet from the CDM as, individually,
they do not have signicant additionality. But their synergistic impact
with complementary investments is potentially signicant (CAI-Asia
2011). Similarly, while the CDM encouraged individual energy-efcient
investments in industry such as new boilers, the overall materials and
energy ows of an industry were essentially left undisturbed. The policy
initiatives required to generate a reducereuserecycle approach from
industry, fostering industrial symbiosis, could not be funded. And yet,
such initiatives would have a fundamental impact on the structure of an
economy.
Other voluntary initiatives have had limited investment impact on urban
areas, and no systemic impact.
342 Green Cities
How to Improve Performance in Green Finance
Barriers to Accessing International Climate Change
Related Finance Faced by Cities
The major barriers to accessing international climate change-related nance
faced by cities include
challenges in project development,
political and regulatory barriers, and
nancial barriers.
Barriers at the Project Development Stage
Lack of knowledge regarding climate change intervention program-
ming and prioritization. City governments and their agencies lack the
capacity to develop project proposals as required by international fund-
ing sources and by national ministries or agencies, which could then
access climate funds from international climate change-related sources.
Poor project assessment and structuring. International climate-
funding sources often require counterpart funding from the city con-
cerned. However, city government ofcials and their implementing
agencies do not have the skills to assess project nancing from domes-
tic and, much more importantly, international nancing sources.
Lack of equity and collateral in securing loans. Cities have limited
scope to raise public funds through tax increases and other revenue
measures.
Cities have not realized the benets of leveraging funding for pub-
lic infrastructure from the private sector. City budgets are increas-
ingly being overwhelmed by recurrent expenditures (e.g., 75%85%
of the total budget of Indonesian cities).
11
Funding climate intervention
projects, most of which comprise complex and capital-intensive infra-
structure, will require collaboration with the private sector, which has the
requisite project development expertise and nancial resources.
Lack of commitment to sustainable development. The priorities of
cities might be biased toward poverty reduction and education rather
than climate change. Short-term budgeting cycles of local governments
also may conict with the long-term project development periods of green
infrastructure projects. Development nance institutions (multilateral and
11
2007 Specic Allocation Fund (DAK) allocations.
Financing Sustainable Cities 343
bilateral) now focus on and give emphasis to sustainable development
goals and environment-friendly and low-carbon infrastructure projects
in their selection of investments to fund.
Political and Regulatory Barriers
Weak institutional framework. The overlapping roles of national
and city governments and agencies result in tedious and difcult
approval processes. Often, there is no clear demarcation of roles and
responsibilities among the various government bodies. This leads to
inadequate communication and consultation among these agencies, as
well as to delays in implementation.
Risk of change of law, policy, and regulations. Compared with the
long-term development periods required by climate interventions,
political decision makers usually have short-term mandates.
Perception of corruption and lack of fair procurement procedures.
Investors and funders are wary of city ofcials and agencies that have
the reputation of hindering competitive bidding and of favoring business
associates and cronies in the implementation of projects.
Financial Barriers
Financially weak projects. Because of their inherent public service
nature, some projects such as ood control initiatives do not provide
nancial returns acceptable to investors and commercial loan sources.
Capital-intensive projects with limitations as to end-user charges will
also be considered as nancially weak projects. An example is bus rapid
transit systems that require massive capital, but that restrict end-user
charges. However, these mass transport systems reduce congestion
and air pollution, and improve the urban quality of life.
Poor creditworthiness of cities. A fundamental determinant of whether
a project will be nanced is the credit risk of the payment counterparty,
that is, the city and its project partners. This has relevance to clean-
energy infrastructure projects and energy-efciency projects.
New technologies that reduce GHG emissions may have higher
investment costs compared with conventional technologies.
Development of new clean technologies under joint-venture structures will
be one facet of a concerted effort to reduce carbon emissions and achieve
long-term GHG stabilization levels. As new technologies are commercialized
and new projects based on such technologies are commissioned, investors,
lenders, and insurers will face challenges in creating project nance
structures around projects that use these technologies that are acceptable
to investors.
344 Green Cities
Actions that Support City-Level Access to International
Climate-Related Finance
Interventions that address the barriers enumerated in the previous section
are described in this section.
Strengthening Project Development
Building capacity and skills. City governments need to conduct a
detailed assessment of the skills required at each level. Nongovernment
organizations, training institutes, and technical assistance funds need
to be tapped for capacity development and technical assistance for
project development. To attract international climate-related nance,
city governments should clearly demonstrate the viability of projects
from the perspective of the investor. This may be done by developing
pre-feasibility studies with the assistance of well-reputed advisors.
Holding stakeholder consultations. Consultations with nancial
institutions, project developers and contractors, end users, and related
government agencies provide valuable insights into their perspectives
regarding project restructuring.
Adopting sustainable development principles. Leading multinational
banks have adopted the Equator Principles which comprise a voluntary
set of standards for determining, assessing, and managing social and
environmental risk in project nancing.
12
Equator Principles Financial
Institutions commit to not providing loans to projects in which the
borrower will not or is unable to comply with their respective social
and environmental policies and procedures for implementing the
equator principles.
Strengthening Regulatory and Institutional Settings
Standardizing procurement and strengthening bidding procedures.
City governments need to have a structured process using a standard
set of criteria to evaluate procurement options for climate-change
interventions, which may take varied forms. Major factors in the
evaluation should consider the governments retention of its operational
exibility, reduction of risks, delivery within a given time frame, and
provision of value for the citys investment.
Covering political risk with insurance. For projects with a high
uncertainty due to political risks, cities could tap multilateral and
12
Equator Principles. http://www.equator-principles.com/
Financing Sustainable Cities 345
bilateral nancial institutions for political risk insurance cover. One such
institution is the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency.
Obtaining a favorable credit rating. The potential to raise capital
through bond issuances offers signicant opportunities. In 20002007,
bond issuances in Asia were a mere $3.2 billion compared with $333
billion in Europe during the same period (Platz 2009). For the issuance
of municipal bonds, city governments need to obtain a favorable credit
standing by curbing budget decits, ascertaining cash inows, and
improving accounting practices. A citys municipal bond credit rating
may be upgraded through credit enhancement mechanisms such as
escrowing dedicated revenue streams, full guarantees of interest and
principal, pledging of collateral, and pool nancing.
Reducing Project Risks and Commercial Barriers
Pursuing private sector nancing. A signicant funding gap exists
between the infrastructure requirements of climate change projects
required in Asian cities and the scarce resources available within the
public sector. Compounding this gap is the inability of cities to raise funds
from local taxes and domestic capital; chronic budget decits; and their
traditional reliance on fund transfers from the central government and its
line agencies, the latter being disinclined to provide allocations for climate
change projects. The public sector can collaborate with private sector
partners and share its technical expertise, while leveraging the private
sectors project implementation expertise and funding capabilities.
Pursuing national government support for nancially weak projects.
Environmentally oriented projects may not be nancially viable without
government support. Through their leagues and associations, cities
should submit proposals for viability gap funding, availability-based
payments, shadow tolling, and tax exemptions and/or government
guarantees on debt. The private sector may be completely dependent
on this project support for its implementation of such projects. Ignoring
this need may lead to the private sectors disinterest in city-level climate
change interventions.
Utilizing the carbon market. Additional revenues from carbon nance
enhance the overall nancial viability of low-carbon projects, and as
performance-based payments, they create positive incentives for
management and operational practices that sustain emission reductions
over time (World Bank 2010c).
Leveraging existing assets. Asset leverage, mainly in the form of land-
based nancing, has become an important source of urban infrastructure
nancing. As counterpart funding is often required by micronance
institutions, bilateral nance institutions, and private investors as an
346 Green Cities
assurance of the citys commitment to project implementation, land
leases and land sales provide for signicant up-front revenues for capital
infusions. Over the past decade, Bogota, Colombia has conanced over
200 public works projects with international nancial institutions through
betterment levies from gains in land value (Peterson 2009).
Accessing special environmental programs and funds from national
line agencies and ministries. National governments have dedicated
schemes for nancing urban infrastructure that include climate change
mitigation and adaptation projects. One example of this is the Jawaharlal
Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission in India. As of December
2009, $13 billion has been released to city-based projects that have
implemented mandatory reforms such as environmental protection and
the use of publicprivate partnership schemes.
City aggrupations and regional proposals for environmental
allocations. Individually, a city submitting proposals for allocations for
climate change measures to the national government or its agencies will
be politically weak. Provincial and regional associations such as APEKSI
(League of City Mayors in Indonesia) submitting project proposals
for green infrastructure directly to line ministries will likely have more
political clout than individual city proposals.
Examples of Effective Financing Structures
As discussed, the investment decisions of individual entrepreneurs and
subsovereign agencies and governments collectively determine whether an
economy moves on a low-carbon trajectory. These decisions, in turn, can be
inuenced by microeconomic measures that provide positive and negative
incentives that determine the outcome of investment decisions.
The following are the basic principles of such interventions:
When dealing with the informal sector, understand the risk prole, cash
ow, and balance sheet of the informal entrepreneur concerned.
When dealing with formal sector industry, understand the levers that can
be applied to oligopolistic industries.
When dealing with local governments and utilities, understand the
cost structures they face, which are often mandated by political
considerations, and the cost-recovery regime in place, which is again
inuenced by political considerations.
When trying to foster publicprivate linkages, be aware of the transaction
costs of each party and the appropriate allocation of risk.
Financing Sustainable Cities 347
Designing effective incentives under such circumstances is difcult. And
it is of no help to say that the system is broken and needs to be xed. The
issue is, and will remain, what provides the incentives to x broken systems?
An excellent example of effective administrative measures is the
Department of the Interior and Local Government of the Philippines which
provides matching grants for local governments undertaking sanitary
landlls. This program is simple to administer, has transparent benets to all
sides, and is successful (Box 7.13).
Box 7.13 Performance-Based Funding through Matching Grants
in the Philippines
In an effort to improve the performance of local government agencies, a
performance-based incentive policy (PBIP) was established by the Department
of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) of the Philippines. The purpose
of the PBIP was to rationalize intergovernmental fiscal transfers made by the
national government to local government units (LGUs) for the purpose of
improving governance and delivery of basic services. The PBIP links incentive
payments to performance targets and has thus appropriated P500 million to
the Performance-Based Challenge Fund (PCF) for the purpose of financing
subsidies to qualified LGUs.
Under the PCF, specific performance criteria were established in key areas
of governance, including planning, fiscal management, transparency and
accountability, and performance management. LGUs that fulfill these criteria
can receive counterpart funding for local development projects. The PCF
provides one-to-one matching funds for investments undertaken by eligible
LGUs in the following areas:
Attainment of Millennium Development Goals in a broad range of areas (e.g.,
school buildings, rural health units and health centers, birthing facilities, water
and sanitation systems, farm-to-market roads, housing, and settlements).
Local economic development (e.g., local roads and bridges, tourism facilities,
irrigation systems, postharvest facilities, cold-storage facilities, ports and
wharves, and other economic infrastructure and growth-enhancing projects
such as markets, slaughterhouses, and water supply systems).
Adaptation to climate change and preparedness for disasters (e.g., flood
control, reforestation, solid waste management facilities, storm drainage,
dikes and related flood protection measures, slope protection, evacuation
centers, rainwater collectors, early warning devices, and rescue equipment).
As of 2011, the PCF had funded 30 LGU projects in the following areas:
educational facilities, health centers, potable water supply systems, farm-to-
market roads, public markets, eco-tourism parks, public transport terminals,
sea wall and flood-control systems, sanitary landfills, and solid waste
management facilities.
Source: Department of the Interior and Local Government. http://www.dilg.gov.ph
DILG Memo Circular No. 2011-62 Implementation Guidelines of the Performance Challenge Fund.
348 Green Cities
A good example of a system for addressing transaction costs and
allocation of risk is that developed by the Government of Indonesia
(Figure 7.7). This system addresses the following project-related risks:
project development,
land acquisition,
credit risk (addressed through credit-enhancement and risk-mitigation
structures sponsored both by commercial entities and government
agencies, including participation by both international nance institutions
and government for the purpose of providing a halo effect), and
greeneld investor risk (mitigated through renancing mechanisms
that allow initial investors to exit such investments following a specied
period) .
Figure 7.7 depicts the various mechanisms available to investors for
addressing project-related risks associated with initiatives undertaken
in Indonesia. While the structure is comprehensive, the details of such
mechanisms in some cases mitigate against risk reduction, and some
portions of enabling legislation and regulation necessary for operationalizing
risk mitigation are not yet fully in place. This does not mean the system does
not function. Instead, it means that additional resources are required, and that
project preparation will likely require a longer period than would otherwise be
the case. Ultimately, because of the advantages such programs offer, cities
should be aware of the mechanisms available within their national contexts
Figure 7.7 Indonesias Mechanisms for Mitigating and Allocating
Project-Related Investor Risks
GoI = Government of Indonesia, MoF = Ministry of Finance.
Source: ADB.
Financing Sustainable Cities 349
that help them address project-related risks, and should seek assistance
in formulating projects accordingly in cases in which they lack in-house
capacity for appropriate project formulation and structuring.
Leveraging Private Sector Financing for Green Finance
New tools and approaches for attracting private sector nancing. It
is private sector nancial institutions, such as those involved in banking,
insurance, asset management, and venture capital, that have often been
the source of nancial innovation. If the sophisticated thinking that has seen
the development of derivatives, hedge funds, exotic futures markets, and
other risk-diluting products were applied with full force to the challenges of
environmental sustainability, results on a scale currently unimaginable might
be achieved.
The narrow spread of private ows to a limited number of developing
countries leads to several questions. Is the current tool kit of the nance sector
adequate in the way it views, quanties, and prices risks and opportunities
in developing countries? Are signicant developing-country investment
opportunities being missed because current methods of assessing risks
and opportunities are too narrow? Are existing assessment methodologies
so focused on areas in which high transaction volumes are required that
any opportunities not tting a mainstream prole are simply precluded at
the outset? Are those nancial institutions assessing opportunities in the
developing world framing and pricing risk accurately, since only limited viable
investment opportunities exist? If so, which publicprivate mechanisms might
be developed to improve the risk-return prole of investment opportunities in
developing countries? Fostering discussion that responds to these questions
is important and should involve both the public and private sectors.
In summary, sustainability-focused projects in developing countries
can appear unattractive for the following reasons: (i) they are subject to
considerable political risk; (ii) they are perceived to offer low returns; and
often, (iii) the policy environment remains unattractive for any form of private
sector investment. Structures for addressing these issues are described in the
section that immediately follows. These structures need to be differentiated
according to the major types of involvement of the private sector in green
investment:
technology development,
project sponsors and developers, and
nance.
350 Green Cities
The private sector is often wary of green investments in developing
countries due to their relatively low rates of return. In part, this results from
the fact that it is difcult to get consumers to pay the full cost of provision
of the services provided by such investments. For many environmental
infrastructure projects, the health and amenity benets to the community
that the project delivers are not capitalized into the projects nancial rate of
return (i.e., some project benets are externalthey do not accrue directly
to the projects beneciaries, the latter thus understandably being unwilling
to pay for such benets). In such a context, there is scope for intervention
by public sector agencies, either national or international, to support such
investments by providing nancial resources at a level that reects the
benets provided by these investments that are external to beneciary
households. The discussion that follows addresses this issue in the context
of each of the three aspects of green investments enumerated, and in
particular denes the interventions that would likely be the most effective in
this regard.
Technology development. Figure 7.8 depicts the phases of development of
an environmentally benecial technology such as transparent thin-lm solar
panels. Such lms have the potential to be applied to every window in every
Figure 7.8 Funding the Developmental Phases of Environmentally
Benecial Technologies
R&D = research and development, SMEs = small and medium-sized enterprises.
Source: D. Oh. 2011. Green Financing in [the Republic of] Korea. PhD Research Paper, Korea
Corporate Governance Service.
Revenue
Private Sector
Project Financing
PEF (Private Equity Fund)
Public Fund
Public Sector
Loan
R&D Commercialization
SMEs Large company
Firm size
Start-up
R&D project
Credit guarantee
Financing Sustainable Cities 351
building, thus transforming all buildings thus supplied into power stations in
their own right. However, developing such a technology requires availability
of research and development funding, nancing of part of the initial start-up
costs of the enterprise that produces such products, and bridging nance
for transcending the cash ow problems inherent in upscaling production of
such environmentally benecial products.
Because of the positive externalities associated with development of
environmentally benecial technologies, it is economically efcient for the
public sector to take an active role in ensuring that the costs associated with
their development are nanced. On the other hand, the statement should not
be equated with a mandate for the environmental equivalent of stock-picking
(i.e., a public sector agency attempting to select environmental projects with the
highest rate of return from an entire universe of such projects), as this approach
has proven to be ineffective. The principle that is critical to the public sectors
efciently subsidizing such projects is that of structuring publicly provided
assistance in a way that works throughinstead of disablingmarket-based
mechanisms. Under such a system (Figure 7.9), the government provides
(partial) guarantees to banks for reducing the risks associated with funding
such projects. This helps reduce the cost of providing such loans by banks and
other nancial institutions, and likewise reduces the level of risk as perceived by
potential equity investors, thereby crowding in private capital. On the demand
side, reductions in the level of government tax levied on products that use the
environmentally benecial technologies thus developed encourage consumers
to buy such products. Bolstering demand in this manner also helps to secure
nancing for such initiatives.
Figure 7.9 Public Assistance to Environmentally Benecial Projects Provided
through Market-Based Mechanisms
Source:: D. Oh. 2011. Green Financing in [the Republic of] Korea. PhD Research Paper, Korea
Corporate Governance Service.
Company
Green Projects
Consumer
Private capital
Government
Legislation
Banks
Green funds
Compensating
tax deduction
Green
assessment
Low cost loans
Savings
Economic
assessment
Below average
returns
Supervision
Loan payment guarantee
352 Green Cities
Project sponsors. Figure 7.10 depicts the required steps in funding a
project over time and developers. A project moves from being a proposed
investment to a priority project as it is developed, nancial costs are attached
to its specic components, and the nancial returns accruing to the project
are calculated. As a result, the projects implementation and funding structure
needs to be determined at the pre-feasibility stage. Funding for pre-feasibility-
and feasibility-related activities is often difcult for cities to access. However,
this phase is perhaps the most crucial to successful funding, because it is
at this stage that the basis for long-term viability and sustainability is laid.
As the project is documented, and later requisite land is acquired, signicant
nancial outlays are required. For a project hoping to attract private nance,
this is a stage at which the government may need to carry the project forward,
particularly in cases in which the relevant regulatory framework is not fully
developed, and a record of performance in efcient, transparent procurement
has yet to be established. In such cases, the project sponsor often requires
revenue guarantees or credit enhancement of the special purpose vehicle for
a project to achieve nancial closure. Public entities may also be needed to
co-invest in the project together with private nanciers, thus adding a halo
effect that reduces the level of project risk perceived by potential investors.
Further public sector intervention may be required to improve the enabling
environment in the relevant capital market for long-term projects, and to assist
sponsors in renancing the project through mechanisms such as infrastructure
funds, covered bonds, or securitization windows.
As shown in Figure 7.10, numerous nancing agencies are (potentially)
involved over time in the development of a project. At the beginning of the
project development process, nancing for consultants for formulating
the project will likely be required, particularly in the case of environmental
projects. This may be accomplished by government or specialist companies
(such as energy saving companies) that have developed ways of recovering
costs from highly protable projects. In addressing issues associated with
limited funding for this phase, it may be advisable to avail of the services of
the Cities Development Initiative for Asia (CDIA), an ADB-led consortium of
donors that focuses on undertaking pre-feasibility studies and preliminary
project structuring for urban environmental infrastructure projects in Asia.
As the project is developed further, private sector actors are more likely to
fund project development. When nancing of the project is closed, there
is sometimes a need for another set of public interventions, even for a
commercially protable project. To minimize the cost of project funding by
private equity or debt providers, institutions such as ADB or their national
counterparts may provide (i) co-investment through equity and/or debt, thus
providing a halo effect for the project, and/or (ii) various types of credit
enhancement mechanisms such as guarantees, or availability payments.
Financing Sustainable Cities 353
Source: ADB.
Figure 7.10 Procedural Steps Toward Mobilizing Financial Resources
for a Project
Construction Operation










Bid
Documents
Bids
Project Development Entities and
Technical Assistance Providers



NB - = Project financial close = Interim funding step = Project flow

Syndication
and Closing


Prioritization
of Projects
Pre-feasibility
Procurement/
Bids
Public- or
grant-funded
Feasibility
Studies
Contract and
Negotiation
Award
Public Sector Project Owner
(ProcuringAuthority)
Re-bid at end of
Concession
Financial Advisers and Arrangers
Privately-
funded
Feasibility
Studies
Pre-feasibility Study
and Initial Structuring
Awardee:
Single Sponsor or
Consortium
Construction Companies, Engineering Firm,
Corporate Developers and Sponsors
Financial and
Non-Financial Due
Diligence
Additional
Construction
Financing
Brownfield
expansion/
Refinancing/
Secondary Sale
Finance, Cities Development Initiative for Asia. Cities Development
Initiative for Asia (CDIA)s long-term objective is that of promoting
sustainable and pro-poor urban development as a means of improving both
the environment and living conditions in all Asian cities. In pursuing this
objective, CDIA bridges the gap between urban planning and policy making
on the one hand, and concrete provision of basic urban services on the
other. It does this by assisting city governments in pre-project preparation,
and building institutional capacities for seeing such projects through to the
end of their implementation. In recognition of the development objectives
of its partners, CDIA support is underpinned by the following principles: (i)
environmental sustainability, (ii) poverty reduction, and (iii) good governance.
CDIA supports implementation of existing urban development strategies and
plans that provide for socially, economically, and environmentally equitable
and sustainable infrastructure and services.
CDIA has been directly engaged with 39 cities in 13 countries in
performing 60 pre-feasibility studies. Urban transport accounts for more of
CDIAs current portfolio than any other sector, followed by ood and drainage
management, urban renewal, and wastewater management (Figure 7.11).
354 Green Cities
Conclusion
The types of mechanisms needed for enhancing provision of green nance
and, once provided, for accessing such nance efciently are known and,
for the most part, are in pilot somewhere. The challenge is to foster the
spread of such innovation. In sum, the principles of sound green nance
correspond to the four levels of the international system for nancing such
investments that were laid out at the beginning of this chapter. These are
briey described once again.
1) Structures at the international scale for helping developing countries
mitigate the impacts of climate change, or for overcoming the transaction
costs of investing in climate-resilience and mitigation initiatives. Such
initiatives are often nancially and economically viable in the long run,
but entail signicant up-front costs in their implementation.
2) National scal structures that provide both positive and negative
incentives for pollution reduction, energy efciency, reduction of GHG
emissions, and addressing climate change adaptation requirements.
Figure 7.11 Sector Composition of Cities Development Initiative for Asia
Engagement as of December 2011
(Percentage Shares in Total Dollar Value of CDIA Initiatives)
CDIA = Cities Development Initiative for Asia.
Source: Cities Development Initiative for Asia. 2012. Status Report to December 2011. Manila.
Urban Transport
31%
Flood and Drainage
18%
Urban
Renewal
11%
Wastewater
11%
Solid Waste 12%
Water Supply
10%
Slum Upgrading 5%
Energy Efficiency 2%
CDIA Engagement by Sectors (December 2011)
Financing Sustainable Cities 355
3) Systems for regulating national and international capital markets, and
for supporting their capacity in formulating, promoting, and deploying
nancial products for nancing environmental sustainability. Systems
are also required for ensuring access to, and affordability of, such
nancial products.
4) Microeconomic structures for encouraging and supporting the capacities
of the private sector, government agencies, and subnational government
bodies in formulating, structuring, and nancing green investments.
Subnational governments and cities are emerging as large potential
clients for ADB and other development nance institutions with regard
to investments in environmental sustainability. These institutions are thus
well positioned to provide leadership in closing the gaps identied above.
Major areas of requisite support in this regard include (i) policy, regulatory,
and institutional reforms that impact subnational nances and subnational
creditworthiness; (ii) piloting of nancial vehicles such as availability-
payment loans and climate-nance mechanisms with which traditional banks
are unfamiliar; and (iii) building the technical and nancial management
capacity of cities and their subordinate agencies in a way that facilitates
their becoming nancially credible, accountable, and capable of assessing
and accessing green nance.
These entities can facilitate the greening of domestic capital markets by
(i) providing risk-reducing and credit-enhancement support; and (ii) piloting
municipal development fund-type institutions, and building their capacity to
become intermediaries between cities and international and national nance
agencies using, for example, covered bonds. Much experimentation is still
required to determine the forms of risk-pricing and nancial intermediation
that can reliably close the viability gap in green infrastructure investment in
most developing-country cities. Some of the most effective interventions
could well be in more innovative, exible, and responsive project development
systems.
ADB and other development assistance agencies have the mandate
and, potentially, the instruments necessary for supporting development of
green nance in all of these areas. The remaining challenges are twofold:
(i) effectively engaging developing member country governments in
establishing the enabling framework for the effective operation of the needed
mechanisms; and (2) adapting their own systems in a manner that allows
their limited resources to be used most effectively in leveraging international
private sector funds, as well as national public, private, and community
funds. This chapter has set out some examples of appropriate nancing that
can be adopted and replicated in furtherance of this process.
356 Green Cities
Annex
Figure 7.12 Retail nancial products and services that can be used
in nancing green initiatives
Product
Key Product Designs
and Results/Potential Bank Region
Home
Mortgage
Government-led green mortgage
initiative. One percentage-point
reduction in the interest rate for loans
that meet environmental criteria.
Dutch banks Europe
Offers free home energy rating and
offset carbon emissions for every
year of loan. Will soon launch added
features into portfolio.
CFS Europe
(UK)
Green mortgages have only been
announced by these banks, some
of which are the largest mortgage
providers in the country.
Abbey,
HBOS,
Halifax and
others
Europe
(UK)
Generation Green
TM
Home Loan.
Offered to both new and old homes,
so those with existing mortgages
can take advantage of discounted
rates. All projects must exceed state
requirements.
Bendigo
Bank
Australia
Green Power Oriented Mortgage.
Provides an incentive for homeowners
to use renewable power. Design
focuses on sustainable behavior or
customer, rather than on physical
infrastructure of their residence.
N/A N/A
MyCommunityMortgage
TM
and Smart
Commute Initiative Mortgage. Available
to help borrowers buy energy-efcient
homes and use public transportation.
Product features a variety of options
and exible terms.
Fannie Mae
(Citigroup)
US
CMHC offers a 10% premium refund
on its mortgage loan insurance
premiums and extended amortization
to a maximum of 35 years (subject to
lender availability) to purchase energy-
efcient homes or make energy-
efcient renovations. Refund is a
one-time payment.
CMHC
(CIBC, BMO)
Canada
Financing Sustainable Cities 357
Product
Key Product Designs
and Results/Potential Bank Region
Commercial
Building
Loan
Green Loans for new condos.
Developer (Tridel) repays loan with
funds that would otherwise be spent
on operating costs using conventional
equipment and materials. Buildings
must demonstrate +25% energy
savings over conventional designs.
TAF/Tridel

Canada
Provides rst mortgage loans for
building and renancing LEED-certied
commercial buildings. Developers do
not have to pay an initial premium for
green commercial buildings, due to
features such as lower operating costs
and higher performance.
Wells Fargo US
Provides 1/8 of 1% discount on
loans to green leadership projects
in the commercial or multi-unit
residential sectors.
NRB US
Home
Equity Loan
One-Step Solar Financing. Takes
place over a 25-year term, equal to the
same period of time as the solar panel
warranty.
NRB US
Environmental Home Equity Program.
For customers using line of Visa
Access Credit, bank will donate to
an environmental nongovernment
organization.
Bank of
America
US
The bank signed a joint marketing
agreement with Sharp Electronics
Corporation to offer customers easily
accessible and convenient nancing
options to purchase and install
residential solar technologies. Enables
users to take out a home equity loan
or line of credit rather than accessing
savings or taking out a general loan.
Citigroup US
Auto Loan Clean Air Auto Loan with preferential
rates for hybrids. Product recently
redesigned to cover all low-emissions
vehicle types.
VanCity Canada
Table 7.12 continued
continued on next page
358 Green Cities
Product
Key Product Designs
and Results/Potential Bank Region
goGreen Auto Loan product has
achieved worldwide recognition as a
successful green product. Since its
launch, the banks number of car loans
has increased by 45%.
mecu Australia
Fleet Loan Small Business Administration Express
Loans, with rapid approval process,
no collateral, and exible terms,
are offered to truck companies for
nancing fuel-efcient technologies.
Helps in purchasing Smartway
Upgrade kits that can improve fuel
efciency by up to 15%.
Bank of
America
US
Credit Card Afnity Cards. The bank partners with
ENGO, which accepts future royalties
in exchange for the use of its name
and logo. Annual percentage rate of
15%22%, many with annual fees.
Various Various
Climate Card Bank. The bank will
donate to World Wide Fund for Nature.
The sum of donation depends on
the energy intensity of the product or
service purchased with the card.
Rabobank Europe
GreenCard Visa is the worlds rst
credit card to offer an emissions
offset program. Cards will soon be
made available in Germany and parts
of Scandinavia. Product developers
worked to bring this type of product to
US customers in 2007.
Tendris
Holding B.V,
Europe
(NL)
BarclayBreathe Card to include
discounts and low borrowing rates to
users when buying green products
and services. 50% of card prots will
go to fund emission-reduction projects
worldwide.
Barclays UK
Existing cardholders can donate Visa
WorldPoints rewards to organizations
that invest in greenhouse gas
reductions or redeem them for green
merchandise.
Bank of
America
US
continued on next page
Table 7.12 continued
Financing Sustainable Cities 359
Product
Key Product Designs
and Results/Potential Bank Region
The bank donates 1.25 per 100
spent by personal (Co-op debit and
credit cards) and business customers
(Co-op Business Visa) to the banks
Customers Who Care Campaigns.
CFS UK
Deposit Landcare Term Deposit. Australias
rst environmental deposit product.
For every dollar spent, the bank lends
the equivalent to support sustainable
agriculture practices.
Westpac Australia
EcoDeposit. Fully insured deposits
earmarked for lending to local energy-
efcient companies aiming to reduce
waste/pollution, or conserve natural
resources. EcoCash
TM
Checking
Account allows for ve free paper
checks per month, with $3 per-check
charge applied. A portion of this fee
goes to The Climate Trust.
Shorebank
Pacic
US
Sales Consumers can offset carbon dioxide
emissions associated with air travel,
with no funds being channeled to
the bank. This new initiative is in
partnership with offsetting organization
Climate Care.
Barclays,
HSBC
Europe
BMO = Bank of Montreal, CFS = Co-operative Financial Services, CMHC = Canada Mortgage Housing
Corporation, HSBC = Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, LEED = Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design, UK = United Kingdom, US = United States.
Source: Adapted from ICF Consulting Canada, Inc. 2007. Green Financial Products and Services: Current
Trends and Future Opportunities in North America. Toronto.
Table 7.12 continued
360 Green Cities
Figure 7.13 Corporate and investment products and services relating to
green investments
Product
Key Product Designs and Results/
Potential
Financial
Institution(s)
Region
Project
Finance
Specialized service divisions are
dedicated to long-term nancing of
clean-energy projects. Some banks
also specialize in one (or several)
renewable technology types, and/
or place a premium on working with
states in which regulatory framework
and government policy encourages
early adoption of clean technologies.
BNP Paribas
(wind)
Rabobank,
Barclays,
Fortis,
Standard
Chartered
Bank, WestLB
(biofuels and
wind)
Global
Led the effort to raise $1.5 billion of
equity for the wind-power market in
2006, with approximately $650 million
allocated to its own portfolio. The
rms renewable energy portfolio now
comprises approximately $1 billion of
equity investments in 26 wind farms
since inception in 2003. The rm is
also actively pursuing investments
in biomass, geothermal, and solar
power.
JPMorgan US
Portfolio nancing technique.
Combines the nancing of a portfolio
of renewable energy projects to the
construction risks associated with
project development.
Dexia (Wind) US
Lead arranger of energy-from-waste
project nancing that includes a
25-year loan supported by waste
contracts with local authorities and
corporate backing on noncontracted
waste.
Bank of
Ireland
Europe
Partial Credit
Guarantee
Financial institution provides a bond
issued by a municipality for nancing
environmental projects.
IFC Global
Securitization A risk-sharing arrangement for
environmental projects. The nancial
institution represents a guarantor (or
structuring investor) at the mezzanine
level of risk, allowing the client to
transfer risk to bank.
IFC Global
continued on next page
Financing Sustainable Cities 361
Product
Key Product Designs and Results/
Potential
Financial
Institution(s)
Region
Eco-Securitization scheme will test
the feasibility of nancing natural
infrastructure by linking sustainable
management of resources with the
funding capacity and requirements of
asset-backed securitization.
IFC and DFID Global
Green Mortgage-Backed Securities
(proposed). Designed to package
mortgages on buildings that
meet specic energy-use and
environmental benchmarks. Products
would be rated higher and worth more
as a result of the operational benets
associated with green buildings.
Not yet
implemented
US
Bonds Forest Bond designed to fund
large-scale reforestation in Panama.
Reinsurers underwrite a 25-year bond,
while investors, who are frequent
users of the Panama Canal, will
purchase the bond.
Various Latin
America
Cat bonds provide ancillary capital for
risks from natural catastrophes. Can
pay higher than average yield, while
diversifying investor portfolios and
improving industry reserves.
BNP Paribas,
Goldman
Sachs,
Lehman
Brothers
Technology
Leasing
Provides environment-friendly
technologies at preferential rates.
Deutsche
Bank, ABN
AMRO, and
ING Group
Europe
Private Equity Private equity investments in
wind, solar, and biofuels through
Alternative Investments Sustainable
Development Investment Program.
Citigroup US
Private equity focused on forest
conservation and preserving
biodiversity. Provides 100% nancing,
with a discounted rate on the loan, to
a nonprot organization for acquiring
biologically sensitive land and
implementation of sustainable forestry
practices and management.
Bank of
America
US
Table 7.13 continued
continued on next page
362 Green Cities
Product
Key Product Designs and Results/
Potential
Financial
Institution(s)
Region
Indices Series of environmental private
investor eco-market products.
Includes a biofuels commodity
basket, total returns solar energy
index, clean renewable energy index,
and total returns water index (e.g.,
enables interested parties to invest in
water as a commodity).
ABN AMRO,
JPMorgan
Europe,
US
Carbon
Finance and
Emissions
Trading
Banks provide equity, loans and/or
up-front or upon-delivery payments
for acquiring carbon credits from
the Clean Development Mechanism
and Joint Implementation projects.
Most acquire carbon credits in order
to serve their corporate clients
compliance needs, supply a tradable
product to the banks trading desks,
or develop lending products backed
by emission allowances and
carbon credits.
Barclays,
Capital,
HSBC, Fortis,
ABN AMRO,
BNP Paribas,
JPMorgan,
Goldman
Sachs,
Citigroup,
among others
Global
(Mainly
Europe)
Allowance trading products can
include, but are not limited to,
discrete placement of physical orders,
xed-or-oating swaps, indexed sales
or purchases, options, allowances
repurchase structures, market-
making for spot and forward trades,
and price-hedging based on cross-
commodities.
Various Europe
DFID = Department for International Development of the United Kingdom, IFC = International Finance
Corporation, US = United States.
Source: Adapted from ICF Consulting Canada, Inc. 2007. Green Financial Products and Services: Current
Trends and Future Opportunities in North America. Toronto.
Table 7.13 continued
Financing Sustainable Cities 363
Figure 7.14 Asset management products and services relating
to green investments
Product
Key Product Designs and Results/
Potential
Financial
Institution(s)
Region
Fiscal Green
Funds
By purchasing shares or investing
in Dutch Green Funds, customers
receive an income-tax discount, and
thus accept a lower interest rate on
investment. Banks can offer loans at
lower cost to nance environmental
projects relating to ve eligible
categories.
Dutch banks Europe
Fund UBS (Lux) Equity Fund Eco
Performance is the worlds largest
green fund. 80% of assets are
channeled toward eco- and social
leaders, with 20% going to eco-
innovators. The UBS (Lux) Equity
Fund Future Energy focuses on
clean-energy-sector investments in
four clean-energy-related business
segments.
UBS Europe
Cat Bond Fund Leu Primate Cat Bond Fund. Worlds
rst public fund for catastrophe
bonds, a portion of which is aimed at
climate-related natural disasters (or
climate adaptation). Vehicle designed
to hedge climate risks typically
difcult to cover in the traditional
insurance market.
Credit Suisse Europe
Source: Adapted from ICF Consulting Canada, Inc. 2007. Green Financial Products and Services: Current
Trends and Future Opportunities in North America. Toronto.
364 Green Cities
Figure 7.15 Insurance products and services relating to green investment
Product Key Product Designs and
Results/Potential
Bank Region
Auto Insurance Pay As You Drive
TM

Insurance. Mileage-based
insurance.
Aviva, GMAC
Insurance
Europe
and North
America
10% discount for hybrid
and fuel-efcient vehicles.
The bank can also choose
to offset vehicles annual
emissions (e.g., 20%
emissions offset by CFS
through Climate Care).
CFS, Aviva Europe
and North
America
Recycling Insurance.
Customers pay up to 20%
less for car insurance if
recycled parts are used
when vehicle is damaged
and requires service.
Credit Suisse Europe
Building/Home
Insurance
Green Building
Replacement and Upgrade
Coverage. Product
covers unique type of
green risks relating to
the sustainable building
industry.
Californias
Firemen Fund
US
Climate-Neutral Home
Insurance Policy. First
home insurance product
to carry out greenhouse
gas offsetting based on
customer usage.
UK ETA Europe
Business
Insurance
Environmental Damage
Insurance.
Rabobank Europe
Carbon
Insurance
Contingent Cap Forward
for emissions-reduction
tapes.
Swiss Re Europe
Carbon-emission credit
guarantees.
AIG, Marsh Europe
AIG = American International Group, CFS = Cooperative Financial Service, GMAC = General Motors
Acceptance Corporation, UK = United Kingdom, US = United States.
Source: Adapted from ICF Consulting Canada, Inc. 2007. Green Financial Products and Services: Current
Trends and Future Opportunities in North America. Toronto.
Financing Sustainable Cities 365
Figure 7.16 Selected Multilateral and Bilateral Climate-Finance Sources
Source: ADB. 2012.
International Climate Finance Sources
Multilateral Bilateral
Sectors Funded/Nature,
Type and Level of
Intervention
G
l
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n
Mitigation
energy, efciency
energy, renewable
solid waste
sustainable transport
urban greening
water
wastewater
Adaptation
agriculture
climate resilience
disaster risk
management

land use and forestry
public infrastructure
Level of Intervention
local
national
regional
private sector
Nature of Support
grant
loan
technical
risk mitigation
equity
Type of Intervention
capacity building
concept and plans
infrastructure
operations and
management

technology transfer
366 Green Cities
Figure 7.17 Cities Development Initiative for Asia Program Status Summary Table
(December 2011)
Interventon Sector
Development
Impacts
Country/City
CDIA
Funding
($)
Counterpart
co-nancing
($) U
r
b
a
n

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r
a
n
s
p
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t
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o
d

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o
v
e
r
n
a
n
c
e
Leverage
Infrastructure
Investment
Value
($ million)
Bangladesh
Khulna 483,000 90,000 31.3
Cambodia
Battambang 424,600 90,000 14.0
PRC
Guiyang 521,800 80,000 2,401.0
Handan 250,000 50,000 58.7
Yangzhou 241,000 45,000 122.6
India
Chennai 423,000 84,700 260.0
Cochin 370,000 78,000 49.5
Rajkot 360,600 72,000 15.7
Indonesia
Banda Aceh 327,500 44,000 22.6
Palembang 398,000 75,000 175.0
Surakarta 360,000 80,000 49.0
Yogyakarta 420,000 80,000 62.8
Lao PDR
Pakse 439,000 80,000 34.2
Mongolia
Ulaanbataar 196,000 42,300 10.0
Nepal
Kathmandu 424,000 90,000 33.4
Pakistan
Faisalabad 530,000 106,000 725.0
Philippines
Iloilo 150,000 37,750 39.0
Thailand
Thungsong 100,000 50,00 24.3
Viet Nam
Thanh Hoa 37,100 87,500 38.9
Can Tho 200,000 40,000 34.0
Da Nang 410,000 75,700 29.0
TOTALS 7,399,500 1,477,950 4,230
CDIA = Cities Development Initiative for Asia, PRC = Peoples Republic of China, Lao PDR = Lao Peoples
Democratic Republic.
Source: CDIA. 2012.
Financing Sustainable Cities 367
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373
CHAPTER 8
Smart Concepts for
Greener Cities
by Alexandra Vogl
Introduction
T
he smart in smart city is more than just a simple adjective. It refers to
an intelligent and attractive approach to building sustainable cities that
combines infrastructure, technology, and local community involvement
with a vision based on local conditions, capabilities, and resources.
The urban dimensions shown in Figure 8.1 represent different overlapping
layers that are needed for creating a smart urban structure. Such a model for
smart cities needs a systemic approach, encompassing different dimensions
of smartness and stressing the importance of integration and interaction
across many areas. In the process of becoming a smart city, utilization of
technologies canbut not mustbe an element. Much more important for
smart cities is the ability of how to make use of locally available capabilities.
Can the notion of smart cities subsume economic competitiveness, inclusive
growth, and environmental sustainability? Answering such a question requires
clarifying the meaning of the term smart city itself. This phrase has become
a catch-all reference to urban development that incorporates information
and communication technology (ICT). But even this latter denition remains
obtuse and fuzzy. Smart concepts are integrated into urban development to
acknowledge the growing importance of ICT, but the social and environmental
capital is required to create competitive cities as well. These latter two
attributessocial and environmental capitaldistinguish smart cities from their
technology-laden counterparts such as digital, intelligent, or virtual cities.
The fact that the term smart cities underscores the role of social capital in
sustained urban growth is important, since empirical evidence demonstrates
that the cities that have achieved the most rapid sustained urban growth have
in large measure relied on an educated labor force to accomplish this (Glaeser
374 Green Cities
and Berry 2006). Creating smart cities thus requires not just availability of
ICT but capability on the part of urban inhabitants to use ICT to generate
economic growth. This implies that the manner in which social capital is
distributed among a citys inhabitants is likewise important. For example, if
social inequality is so pervasive as to limit the human capability to use ICT to
a small educated elite, then the economic growth rate of the city in question
will inevitably suffer. Similarly, the degree to which this human capability is
well distributed over the overall urban population will, in large measure, lead
to a higher rate of economic growth for that particular city. This implies that
reducing social inequality as it pertains to human capital can help to create
smart cities that enjoy rapid, sustained economic growth.
Sustaining the current rapid rates of economic growth in the cities of Asia
and the Pacic is one of the greatest challenges the regions urban policy
makers face. Given the alarming rates of urbanization and population growth
forecast for the region, creating smart cities is an important dimension of
delivering sustained growth, since such cities tend to be far more nimble in
responding to changing conditions than do cities that continue to follow the
unsustainable urban development trajectories of the past century. A major
focus of this chapter is thus how urban policy makers can use smart solutions
to address the sustainability challenges of 21st-century urban development.
The chapter is thus replete with numerous examples of how smart solutions
have been used to address todays urban development challenges.
What Does It Mean to be a Smart City?
There is no ofcial denition of the term smart city, although many books
have been written on that topic, and much has been said about it. Ultimately,
creating smart cities that make intensive use of information technology is
efcient in that it provides policy makers with more timely and complete
information, thus enabling them to make decisions that lead to more rapid
rates of economic advance than would occur in the absence of such intensive
use of information technology. Further, intensive use of ICT enables efcient
pricing of publicly provided goods. For example, scarce travel space in the
urban core can be more efciently allocated through the use of smart meters
that sense a vehicles entering a citys congested downtown urban core and
charge for the privilege. Similarly, its use reduces the costs of provision of public
goods, for example, through employing energy-efcient street lighting, and
reducing the costs of revenue collection through e-governance infrastructure.
Such uses of ICT are often perceived to be costly interventions available
only to cities in high-income countries. However, many smart solutions
are available to urban areas in lower-income countries. Examples include
allowing fees to be paid through cell phone communication networks,
constructing multiuse buildings that serve both as schools and community
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 375
centers, establishing neighborhood support committees, providing mentors
to troubled teenagers, and encouraging residents to expand green space
through the use of gardens that improve local air quality. Furthermore, ICT
solutions exist that help improve delivery of basic services to the urban poor
who still lack access to clean water or improved sanitation facilities.
Building smart cities requires a topdown approach that is complemented
by including the public at large in decision making. Thus, building smart
cities requires not only a well-formulated vision of smart urban growth that
is promoted among local-government decision makers but also inclusive
implementation of that vision. At its core, a smart city is a welcoming,
inclusive, open city that enjoys widespread participation by the entire
community it comprises. It is administered with integrity in an accountable,
fair, and honest manner. The administrations of such cities cooperate with
other city administrations in order to learn from practical applications of
urban development innovations elsewhere (Hoornweg 2011).
In sum, as used in this chapter, the term smart city incorporates ICT,
social, and other dimensions of urban life in an intelligent way that improves
the quality of life.
1
A smart city is thus a city that performs well in several
urban dimensions, as well as in combinations of the latter.
Smart cities have to be underpinned with good basic service provision
and constructed in a way that meets their residents needs. A network of
reliable basic infrastructure and service provision for all is the base of smart
cities (Hoornweg 2011). Nevertheless, the main focus and importance of
realizing smart-city concepts is the participation and integration of local
governance and citizens, assuring their acceptance, involvement, and
sometimes also their change of behavior. Especially as urban development
does not follow deterministic rules and there exists no one-and-only recipe
for integrated urban development in general and for smart cities in particular,
holistic development approaches focusing on local conditions including also
knowledge about the mindsets of people are necessary to ensure that cities
become smart, or even smarter. On the one hand, since cities are a kind of
living organism, decisions are often based on human choice as much as on
technical facts and gures. On the other hand, it might also be smarter to omit
specic technologies for specic requirements. Making a city smart might also
require urban leaders to stand for a vision that might not be the most popular
at the beginning. Similarly, it is the responsibility of smart governments to
communicate with local people and help them understand the cities needs
and also participate in development processes. Development of smart cities
is thus a journey, not an overnight transformation.
1
In their study, Gifnger et al. (2007), dene six main axes of smart cities that are used as the
starting point for the following denition, which is amended based on the experiences and research
results of the author. http://www.smart-cities.eu/download/smart_cities_nal_report.pdf
376 Green Cities
Smart Living

g n i m r a f n a b r u l
housing provision of basic services education health
safety and security culture and tourism ifestyle
( ) quality of life
Smart Economy

green jobs small and medium-sized enterprises
green technologies and jobs innovative local industry and businesses
(competitiveness)
Smart Environment



reduction of GHG emissions green and open spaces green buildings
efficient use of natural resources water management
waste management disaster risk management
(sustainability)
Smart Mobility

public transport

environment-friendly modes of transport like public transport
bicycling walking alternative fuel vehicles
reduction of congestion provision of logistics information
(connectivity)
Smart Energy


renewable energy resources energy efficiency
smart grids smart meters fuel cells energy storages
(efficiency)
Smart People



local human and social resources universities schools
business community adolescents minor and ethnical groups
bottomup engagements social integration social cohesion
(knowledge)
Smart Governance

communication mechanism between local government and residents


e-government open data data centers transparency
community consultation
(participation)
Main urban dimensions
for creating a smart city
Figure 8.1 Main Urban Dimensions for Creating a Smart City
GHG = greenhouse gas.
Source: A. Vogl.
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 377
How Much Technology Does a Smart City Need?
Implicit in denitions of the term smart city is the ability to collect, analyze,
and channel data in order to make better decisions at the municipal level
through the greater use of technology, helping cities to become safer,
cleaner, and more sustainable places to live. As many cities already collect
large amounts of data, ICT applications could help to be used more
efciently and also to add real-time data to decision-making processes. The
three main actorslocal governments, businesses, and denizenscould
use ICT tools for collecting and disseminating data to improve their cities.
The private sector has particularly worked with local governments to create
numerous amenities. Private initiatives, such as Ciscos Smart+Connected
Communities, General Electrics Cities, IBMs Smarter Cities, and Siemens
Sustainable Cities, provide technologies and products that bring together
municipal data sets from various sources to facilitate decision making by
local governments. Nevertheless, such projects raise issues as to (i) whether
cities and urban development could be captured in smart algorithms; and
if so, (ii) whether local governments should contract private companies
in fullling their responsibilities, and (iii) whether such partnerships would
actually improve the quality of urban life.
Real-time data collection with networks of wireless intelligent sensor
nodes can obviously support the measurement of various parameters for
more efcient urban management, and as such can support the development
of smart cities. For example, the concentration of pollution in each street can
be monitored and automatic alarms activated when radiation levels exceed
a certain limit. Car trafc can be monitored and the data thus generated
can be used to improve the functioning of trafc lights in order to avoid
congestion. Similarly, vehicle movement can be reduced by systems that
detect where the nearest available parking slot is located. All such measures
Smart cities make urbanization more inclusive, bringing together formal and
informal sectors, connecting urban cores with peripheries, delivering services
for the rich and the poor alike, and integrating the migrants and the poor
into the city. Promoting smart cities is about rethinking cities as inclusive,
integrated, and livable. [] The concept of smart cities is really about good
governance. Its about giving basic services to our citizens. Its about livability.
Its about how we are using our resources. It is how a city functions on a day-
to-day basis. I think smartness is about doing more with less. Abha Joshi-
Ghani, World Bank
Source: R. Morier. 2012. Who Needs Smart Cities for Sustainable Development. 12 March. World Bank.
378 Green Cities
can support cities in improving efciency, optimizing the use of infrastructure
facilities, saving energy, reducing air pollution, and improving the quality of
life. Nevertheless, it has to be stressed that using ICT as an instrument for
integrated urban development is beside collecting data; it is about the ability
to provide efcient services, reduce waste, and empower residents to make
more informed decisions about the resources they consume and to take a
more proactive role in governing their urban units.
The bias lurking behind every large-scale smart city is a belief that bottom-up
complexity can be bottled and put to use for topdown endsthat a central
agency, with the right computer program, could one day manage and even
dictate the complex needs of an actual city. [] the smartest cities are the
ones that embrace openness, randomness and serendipityeverything that
makes a city great. Accessible technology helps inform and empower people
to shape and to lead their cities. Using ICTs to build the next generation of
organized, informed and empowered leaders who will use their vision to
shape citiesnow thats smart.

Source: G. Lindsay. 2011. Not-So-Smart Cities. The New York Times. 24 September.
Must Smart Cities Provide Open-Data Access?
Research institutions and nongovernment organizations (NGOs) are working
to showcase the fact that the smartness of cities is more on opening data for
public use than on hiring consultants and buying ICT applications. They stress
that open data can be used to create a variety of applications for improving
urban life that follows peoples needs and makes governance easier for local
ofcials. So at the technical level, smart cities are confronted with the need for
open, standards-based platforms and data, as well as commercial and public-
service models that allow easy integration. Nevertheless, becoming a smart
city is more than simply arriving at a technical solution: The real innovation
that local planners need is not just new technology, but new ways of engaging
the public in the direction and development of cities (Lind 2012).
There are also many opportunities for using open data to focus on one
or the other urban dimension (Figure 8.2), but surprisingly few of them are
being taken advantage of. Application developments still focus on transport
and governance. One reason for this might be that good sources of open
environmental data (such as water losses and energy consumption) are often
difcult to nd. Ofcial institutions either cannot or will not release information
or data under the control of private companies. Concurrently, technology
has enabled the public to create their own data, to use social media to voice
peoples needs, and to enhance government data. As municipal budgets
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 379
are tight, having local people empowered to improve their own environment
will be critical in developing smart cities. Nevertheless, there is the need to
attempt real reforms. Otherwise, technologies risk becoming nice to have
rather than need to have.
Smart Economy
(competitiveness)
Smart Mobility
(connectivity)
Smart Energy
(efficiency)
Smart People
(knowledge)
Smart Living
(quality of life)
Smart Governance
(participation)
Smart Environment
(sustainability)

Ubiquitous connectivity: anytime/anyplace access to networks


E eb services: increase access, improve quality, reduce costs
Health care data analytics: provide rapid diagnostics, preventive
care with better cost-efectiveness
ducation w

Cloud computing: data storage and processing as online service


Open standards: service-oriented architecture for interoperable
hardware and software systems
Collaboration platforms: unifed communications platforms bringing
technologies/sectors/people together

Smart meters: real-time access to energy consumption and costs


Smart grids: greater efciency in power distribution, monitoring,
and maintenance
Real-time data analytics: power quality and energy conservation
monitoring

Radio-frequency identifcation: easier access encouraging the use of


public transport
Sensor networks: real-time based congestion charging
Real-time trafc information systems: making travelling more efcient

Real-time information: anticipate and respond actively to emergencies


Digitally controlled devices: real-time control of buildings and
infrastructure
Geospatial platforms: easier, faster, and cheaper abilities to use data
on a map or aerial image

Social networks: enabling community activities


Anytime/anyplace devices: designed for accessing services from the
cloud via Wi-Fi network
Open data access: supporting development of new applications

E-government: better access to services and more transparency


Urban operational centers: advanced real-time data analytics for fact-
based decisions
Data analytics: efcient municipal services delivery, cost control, or
consolidated billing
Examples for ICT operating systems
within the urban dimensions
Figure 8.2 Examples for ICT Operating Systems within the Urban Dimensions
ICT = information and communication technology.
Source: A. Vogl.
380 Green Cities
Common Approaches to Smart Cities
Investments in building smart cities will be on the rise in the coming years.
Pike Research estimates that during the period 20102020, more than $100
billion will be spent worldwide on ICT to support smart city development,
and that by 2020, annual expenditure will be almost $16 billion (Bloom
2011). In summary of the approaches to smart cities that most frequently
occur in discussions, the focus is on (i) upgrading and linking infrastructure,
(ii) creating a competitive environment, (iii) ensuring inclusiveness, and
(iv) securing environmental sustainability. Each of these approaches is
discussed in turn.
Upgrading and linking infrastructure. This approach is about the utilization
of networked infrastructure to improve economic and political efciency
and enable social, cultural, and urban development (Hollands 2008). The
term infrastructure indicates basic services for business, housing, and
leisure that are connected through ICT networks. One of the general ideas
in this regard is to centralize the management of municipal services, thereby
making them easier and less expensive to manage, especially as demand
for those services grows (Bloom 2011). In the forefront of this idea is a wired
city as the main development model and source of growth.
Creating a competitive environment. This approach allows a smart city to
take advantage of the opportunities ICT offers to increase local prosperity
and competitiveness, which implies integrated urban development based
on multi-actor, multisector, and multilevel perspectives. This emphasizes
economy-led urban development in creating business-friendly cities, and
attracting, in particular, green industries. To this end, for example, cities may
design business parks as smart cities.
Ensuring inclusiveness. This approach gives attention to the role of social
and human capital in urban development. In this context, a smart city is a
city whose community is able to use smart solutions to adapt or change
behavior, and to learn and nd innovative solutions for a higher quality of life.
This can include a major focus on achieving social inclusion in public services
and on emphasizing local participation, which is seen as a major strategic
component of smart cities. A move toward this approach could, for example,
include integration of participatory techniques such as online consultation,
always bearing in mind that people need the requisite knowledge and ability
to use such smart solutions. If social issues are not properly taken into
account, social polarization may arise as a result. The debate regarding the
possible class-inequality effects of policies oriented toward involving ICT
solutions in creating smart cities has still not been resolved. However, it is
exactly the question of how to ensure inclusiveness that can determine the
very notion of a smart city in contrast to a digital, virtual, or intelligent city.
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 381
Securing environmental sustainability. This approach is a major driver
of the smart-city movement worldwide. On a basic level, smart cities are
usually part of large urban initiatives that integrate ICT components, such as
smart meters, smart grid infrastructure, and renewable energy production
facilities, which have an obvious role in curbing primary energy consumption
and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The focus here is on responsible
and efcient use of natural resources, adaption and mitigation of climate
change, and strengthening the use of renewable resources. For example,
taking measurements to improve air quality, providing exact forecasts of
hazards, and linking such kinds of information with other sectors might be
part of the environmental sustainability component of smart cities. This is
strongly linked to economy-led and socially inclusive development, because
the balance of growth-enhancing measures and environmental protection
is a cornerstone of sustainable urban development. In this context, smart-
city concepts represent a move toward making environment-friendly cities
more attractive to families, businesses, and industries, and maintaining a
high quality of life over the long term (Bloom 2011).
In any case, developing smart cities is an approach that rst needs a
common vision. For example, all stakeholders should agree on particular
goals, such as achieving CO
2
targets, saving a certain amount of energy
or water, or limiting waste to a certain quantity. Becoming a smart city
is a transformation; thus a clear vision and road map are necessities in
formulating an action plan (van Beurden 2011).
Which Cities Are Todays Smartest?
Smart cities are developing around the globe. These cities mostly combine
elements like zero-emission buildings, environment-friendly urban transport,
renewable energy, and advanced water and sewage management to increase
efciency and reduce negative environmental impacts. New developments
are especially criticized for being articial creations that are cut off from
surrounding societies.
Forbes magazine released a list of the Worlds Smartest Cities at the
end of 2009. These cities were analyzed and ranked according to three
key words: environmental friendliness, knowledge-based, and self-
sustainability. The outcome of this exercise was that todays smart
cities tend to be smaller, compact, and more efcient; in short, places like
Amsterdam; Seattle; Singapore; Curitiba, Brazil; and Monterrey, Mexico
(Kotkin 2009).
Putting the smart city of the future aside for a moment, in 2012, a
climate strategist from the United States put together a list of the worlds 10
382 Green Cities
smartest cities based on previous city rankings in innovation, quality of life,
sustainability, digital governance, and orientation toward becoming a digital
community (Cohen 2012b).
2
Because this ranking was not based on a precise
denition of the term smart city, it demonstrates the existing spectrum
of smart cities, rather than dening particular rankings for particular cities.
The heavy presence of European cities in the ranking might be due to the
European Unions efforts at devising a strategy for achieving urban growth
in a smart sense for its metropolitan city-regions that follows its Strategic
Energy Technology Plan (SET-Plan) launched in 2011, which has a heavy
focus on energy savings and climate change, as buildings and transport are
key in both its urban planning and energy-saving programs.
The Top 10 Smart Cities on the Planet and a brief description of the
approaches they used in achieving that status follow directly below.
Vienna, Austria
Vienna is establishing bold smart-city
targets and tracking the citys progress
in reaching them with programs such
as Smart Energy Vision 2050, Roadmap
2020, and Action Plan 20122015. To
achieve the targets it has set, Vienna is
incorporating stakeholder consultation
processes into formulating and executing
changes in carbon-intensity, transport, and
land-use planning in hopes of becoming a
major European player in smart-city green
technologies. The city is undertaking a
broad range of projects within an integrated strategy for smart urban
development. An example of various sectors working together is Viennas 14
drinking water hydropower plants within its water supply network reducing
2
Cohen (2012b) leveraged about a dozen global and regional rankings of smart-city
components in order to develop a global ranking of smart cities.
Smart cities use information and communication technologies (ICT) to be
more intelligent and efficient in the use of resources, resulting in cost and
energy savings, improved service delivery and quality of life, and reduced
environmental footprintall supporting innovation and the low-carbon
economy. Boyd Cohen, PhD, LEED AP, climate strategist
Source: Cohen 2012b.
dr i nki ng wat er
hydropower plants
14
electrical ENERGY
GENERATE
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 383
pressure in their pipes, thus generating green energy, which is distributed
to a local energy supplier. The 65 million kilowatt-hours of electricity
per year thus generated fulll the annual electricity needs of 50,000
inhabitants. The plants are nanced through a publicprivate partnership
(TINA VIENNA 2012).
Toronto, Canada
Toronto is moving toward a low-carbon
economy by opening a Business Analytics
Solutions Center and collaborating with the
private sector in creating a Smart Commute
Toronto initiative in hopes of increasing
transit efciency in the citys metro area.
For example, they use natural gas from
landlls to power the citys garbage trucks.
The City of Toronto Fleet Services Division
is responsible for managing the citys eet
of 5,200 corporate vehicles and pieces
of equipment, more than 10% of which
are smart vehicles. Use of these vehicles reduced CO
2
emissions by
approximately 15,000 tons over the period 20082011 compared with using
conventional vehicles. This equals an 11% reduction in eet emissions.
Paris, France
Paris is well-known for its successful large-
scale, self-service bicycle-sharing system
called Vlib. This service consists of 20,000
bicycles that are available 24 hours a day.
Its 1,800 bicycle stations, which are located
every 300 meters, use electronic terminals
and thus can be accessed by smart cards
and phones. The concept underlying Vlib
is to provide affordable access to bicycles
for short-distance trips in an urban area as
an alternative to motorized public transport
or private vehicles, thereby reducing trafc
congestion, noise, and air pollution. Since December 2011, Vlib has
been complemented by an electric car-sharing scheme that operates on
similar principles.
15t
REDUCTION
co
2
emissions
BICYCLES
20
t
h
o
u
s
a
n
d
l ocated ever y
3 0 0 me t e r s
384 Green Cities
New York City, United States
Like Toronto, New York City partnered
with the private sector to build an efcient
technology platform under the citys ICT
infrastructure modernization program.
The goal of this initiative is to streamline
delivery of city services by consolidating
and updating ICT, thereby reducing energy
consumption, strengthening security, and
providing city workers with faster access
to information. The new consolidated data
center, which will bring together information
from more than 40 government agencies to
a modern cloud computing environment, is expected to save the city $100
million over 5 years. Previously, the city operated dozens of separate data
centers that lacked basic capabilities such as 24-hours-per-day support
in re suppression, emergency response, and security planning. The new
center, which was created under the Citywide IT Infrastructure Services
(CITIServ) Program, will enable New York to expand existing shared services;
reduce costs; and provide modern, reliable, secure, and green-technology
services (Hickey 2011).
London, United Kingdom
The city is well recognized for implementing
a congestion tax and having a robust public
transit system. But London has done much
more in becoming a smart city. Concerning
public access to data, Londons Datastore
encourages development of innovations with
more than 5,000 public free-of-charge data
sets relating to various issues. Furthermore,
the city is partnering with private companies
to launch the largest free Wi-Fi network
in Europe. London also started RE:FIT, a
public building retrot program that reequips
buildings with new insulation, low-carbon cooling and heating systems, and
modern management technologies. Pilot projects under this program have
been initiated for 42 public sector buildings across London. These projects
resulted in energy savings measures over approximately 146,000 square
meters of building space, and reduced CO
2
emissions by more than 7,000
tons, equivalent to an average 28% reduction in energy consumption. With
INTEGRATE
1
CLOUD
40
more then
government
AGENCIES
computing
environment
fourty
28%
REDUCTION
co
2
in consumption energy
- 7,000t
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 385
annual energy savings of more than $1.5 million, the payback period for the
expenditure of $10.8 million under the program will be 7 years. In addition,
a framework with standard contracts and tools that facilitated replication
of these pilot projects was likewise developed under the initiative (Greater
London Authority webpage).
Tokyo, Japan
Tokyo is known as a hub of innovation of
digital-city approaches and smart-mobility
solutions. In addition, Tokyo is creating
new smart suburbs. Often driven by high-
technology companies in cooperation with
municipal bodies, such initiatives reduce
carbon emissions through an intelligent
network of electricity grids and homes
tted with high-tech equipment such
as solar panels, storage batteries, light-
emitting-diode applications, and devices
that communicate with each other in order to maximize energy efciency.
Located 40 kilometers southwest of Tokyo, the smart-town project in
Fujisawa city will build 1,000 houses that use smart grids and high-tech
equipment (Tanikawa 2011).
1,000
new houses
GRIDS
SMART
u
s
i
n
g
The Japan Eco-Town Project was initiated by the government as early as
1997 to achieve a low-carbon, zero-emissions society. Twenty-six areas of
this development have been approved, with the objective of promoting
environmental industries. The initiative involves industry, the public sector,
and consumers in creating a resource-recycling society that uses the reduce
reuserecycle approach to creating an environment-friendly city. Japans Eco-
Towns have a number of key features such as (i) legislation that encourages
a material-recycling society, (ii) cooperation between national and local
governments in bringing clusters of industry to the site, (iii) product research
and development, (d) large and rapidly expanding eco-business market,
both domestically and internationally, (iv) a heavy focus on environmental
technologies and innovative solutions in addressing environmental challenges,
and (v) a focus on energy conservation, material development, and integrated
waste management. As of 2006, 26 areas in Japan have been approved by the
government as Eco-Town projects.
Source: T. Fujita. 2011. Regional System Innovation from Eco-Model Cities in Japan and Their
Contribution to Asian Cities and Regions. ISAP 2011 Low Carbon City Session in Yokohama.
27 July.
386 Green Cities
Berlin, Germany
Together with the private sector, the City of
Berlin is testing smart meters for housing
districts and retrotting residential buildings
with energy-saving measures. Today, Berlin
is Germanys largest e-mobility laboratory.
Together with the industrial and service
sectors as well as research institutes and
universities, the city is testing technologies
for ensuring mobility in future years.
Under its Action Plan for Electromobility
2020, the city is pursuing e-mobility by
constructing 550 recharging stations at a
cost of 80 million euros. The city is also encouraging new electric vehicle-
to-grid technologies and electric-vehicle car-sharing systems (Berlin Agency
for Electromobility 2011).
Copenhagen, Denmark
Copenhagen has committed to carbon
neutrality by 2025. In addition to widespread
local commitment to this goal (e.g., 40%
of the population regularly commutes via
bicycle), there is also strong political support
for stimulating the economy through green
innovations. Copenhagen also hosts one of
the largest global cleantech clusters. The
Danish cleantech sector already accounts
for 16% of total exports, with 40% of these
companies enjoying annual growth rates of
more than 25% (City of Copenhagen 2012).
Hong Kong, China
Hong Kong, China has been a leading
producer of radio-frequency identication
(RFID) technology, particularly in the
production of smart cards. The so-called
Octopus Card, which was introduced in
1997, is now used by millions of residents
for services such as public transit, library
access, building access, shopping, and
parking. Today, more than 20 million cards
11
transacti ons
m
i
l
l
i
o
n
RFID
dai l y vi a
CARDs
550
INSTALLED FOR
eCAR SHARING
recharging
s t a t i o n s
EXPORTS
16
provided by
of total DANISH
%
cl eantech
s e c t o r
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 387
are in circulation, which is nearly three times the number of its residents.
The cards are used by 95% of the population of Hong Kong, China aged 16
to 65, generating over 11 million daily transactions worth HK$100 million,
or $12.8 million (Octopus Cards Limited webpage). The city is also
experimenting with RFID technology in its airport as well as throughout its
agriculture supply chain.
Barcelona, Spain
As a pioneer in low-carbon solutions,
Barcelona was among the rst cities in the
world to introduce a solar thermal ordinance
in 2000 that required all new buildings
over a certain size to generate hot water
from solar thermal energy. In 2011, the
city started an initiative that promoted the
adoption of electric vehicles and charging
infrastructure. In addition, Barcelona Wi, a
free city service, enables people to connect
to the Internet through 430 Wi-Fi hotspots
located in various municipal amenities
and public-access points (Barcelona City webpage). Beside such general
infrastructure, the citys 22@Barcelona project transforms former industrial
land into a living lab for urban, economic, and social innovation (22@
Barcelona website).
It is obvious that there would be many other candidates for smart-city
status that might also be included in the list, if one looked at initiatives aimed
at transforming already-existing urban environments through approaches to
smart design, construction, and operation of new cities. Because of their
rapid rates of urbanization, cities in Asia and the Pacic will soon leapfrog
into the future to follow the examples of their developed-country peers.
Making Already-Existing Cities Smarter
Existing cities are mainly facing the challenge of how to adapt to
economic competitiveness and the expectation of residents for continuous
improvement of basic services, while reducing GHG emissions and the
overall urban ecological footprint. This is because improving a citys
environment, its quality of life, and raising its prole as a high-tech and green
investment center is one way of building an economic base for the coming
decades. There exists a wealth of pilot programs that aim to develop more
integrated transformation programs that are already under way worldwide.
430
P U B L I C
WIFI H
O
T
S
P
O
T
S
388 Green Cities
Cities already in existence must develop models for urban renewal. Similarly,
all smart cities hope that by becoming smart cities earlier than others, they
will be in a position to provide top-quality infrastructure and services, and
hence, a better quality of life in the coming decades.
Singapore
Singapore is promoting smart
innovations in policy and
infrastructure. At nearly 90%, the
city-state has one of the highest
home ownership rates in the
world. Singapores politicians
are doing their best to keep
vehicle ownership rates (and
subsequent trafc and new
road infrastructure expenditures)
as low as possible. Singapore
has an auction system just for
obtaining the right to purchase
a car. Depending on the type of
vehicle, auction values varied between $50,000 and $75,000 in 2011. The
government also imposes massive taxes on the purchase of vehicles. On
top of this, Singapore has implemented electronic road pricing, which varies
depending on the hour, in an attempt to incentivize off-peak travel rather
than peak-time travel. Cellphone data are used to map trafc and create
alternative routes. Besides that, the citys robust metro system is reliable and
modern. Stations are clean, and, as a result, the mass rapid transit system is
very popular (Cohen 2012a).

On the sustainability side, Singapore generally
gets very high marks. The city-state has a high-level water management
program that avoids dependence on water imports. The system consists
of rainwater catchment, wastewater recycling, and desalination (Siemens
2011). The latter of course requires a lot of energy, but the government is
working with the private sector to explore energy reduction technologies
and strategies. There is also regular investment in ICT that ranges from
ubiquitous security cameras to a plan to roll out a ber network to every
neighborhood, to sensors in public housing that detect earthquake tremors
and send real-time texts to city engineers to request building inspections.
Portland, United States
The determination of Portlands residents to lead a more environmentally
smart lifestyle dates back to the 1970s, when community-led protests
forced a switch of public money from a new freeway to a light railway
Marina Barrage: modern Infrastructure and green space
P
h
o
t
o
:

A
.

V
o
g
l
.
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 389
system. In 1993, Portland became
the rst urban jurisdiction in the
United States to adopt a plan for
addressing climate change. In
2011, the city started an electric
vehicle project and a program
to transform 6,000 buildings by
offering low-interest loans to
owners wishing to improve energy
efciency (Morris 2012).
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In 2010, Rio de Janeiro opened an
information management center
that integrates information and
processes from 30 different city
agencies into a single operation
center that provides a holistic view
of how the city is functioning on a
daily basis. The operation center
serves as the nerve center
of the city, applying analytical
models to more effectively predict
and coordinate responses to
emergency incidents, and to
manage movement of trafc and
public transport and the efciency of power and water supplies. In addition
to using all information available for municipal management, data are shared
with the population through mobile devices and social networks in order to
empower people to contribute to an improved ow of city operations.
Medellin, Colombia
Medellins rst cable cars started
running in 2004, offering residents
in the remote and mainly poor
areas (barrios) a 7-minute ride
to the metro system and the city
center. Previously, this journey
took 1 or 2 hours by minibus. Over
the following 4 years, a second
line was constructed, and libraries
and community centers including
nurseries have been built in and
Two types of light rail vehicles in Portland
Source: http://www.railway-technology.com/projects/
portland/portland5.html
In Rio de Janeiro, one operation center runs the city
Source: http://www.lastfm.de/group/Flagcounter/
forum/94881/_/543479/186
Medellin Cable Car Station
http://www.medellininfo.com/metro/metrocable11.JPG
390 Green Cities
around the stations. This smart transport system integrates the poor into
the community and economy, rather than sentencing them to life in its
outskirts (Morris 2012). At the same time, Medellin stressed the social and
economic benets that public architecture and new public spaces can
create for long-term, community-based policies that lead to urban renewal
(Kimmelmann 2012).
Kibera, Kenya
Until 2009, the slum of Kibera was
left off the ofcial maps of Nairobi.
Together with local people,
researchers started a project
that created their own interactive
map, recording streets, buildings,
and water pumps, as well as
dangerous or well-lit areas.
The result was not just a map
for locals, but an international
awareness of Kibera that caused
the government to include the
area in ofcial maps. In turn, another media project was launched that
allowed inhabitants to report emergencies or start conversations on politics
via short message services (Map Kibera website).

Building New Smart Cities
One of the great social changes of this century in developing countries is
the evolution toward a predominantly urban society. One of the emerging
questions is how smart the development of the new cities will be. According
to the United Nations Human Settlements Programme worldwide, 510
new small cities, 132 new intermediate cities, and 52 new big cities
emerged between 1990 and 2000, with a combined population of 254 million
(UN-HABITAT 2008). If that gure is projected into the future and multiplied
by a fairly conservative estimate of construction costs, and a relatively small
percentage of that is taken for high-technology infrastructure, its trillions of
dollars.
3
This offers the potential for smart-city development, particularly in
the context of Asias rapid urbanization, and in countries such as the Peoples
Republic of China (PRC) that expects 220 new cities with more than 1 million
inhabitants to be built by 2025 (McKinsey Global Institute 2009).
3
Andrew Comer in an interview for the Global Urbanist (2011).
Interactive map at the homepage of Voice of Kibera
Source: http://voiceofkibera.org/main
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 391
Some cities are being built from scratch that incorporate smart- and ICT-
based sustainable technologies. Examples include Masdar City in the Middle
East, which has become a notable center for smart-city development; and
in Asia, Songdo (Republic of Korea), Tianjin Eco-City (PRC), Kochi (India),
and Fujisawa (Japan). New smart-city development is also occurring in the
developed world, though on a much smaller scale, and often on browneld
sites within or close to existing cities.
Masdar City, United Arab Emirates
Designed to be a carbon-free district for 40,000 residents, Abu Dhabis
multibillion-dollar investment in Masdar City is scientic in nature. Yet, the
commercial side of Masdar City is a showcase of products from companies
around the world. In short, it could be described as an urban laboratory. In
Masdar City, advanced technologies measure, monitor, and thus produce
information for handling basic urban infrastructure systems, meaning
everything that ows in and out of the city, whether water or refuse. The
upper part of Masdar City is built on a raised platform that gives access to
pipes and is a showcase for a variety of green technologies like geothermal
heating and cooling, electric cars, solar power, and advanced water systems
(Sassen 2012).
Tianjin Eco-City, Peoples Republic of China
Experts anticipate that the PRCs urban population will double by 2040. New
cities are literally springing up out of the ground. Developed by researchers
in collaboration with private partners and Tongji University in Shanghai, the
Eco-City model is a method of harmonizing urban growth requirements with
environmental protection. Eco-City master plans are developed to help ensure
that new satellite cities are self-sufcient, ecological, and, above all, pleasant
to live in from the very beginning. The master plans include intelligent building
systems and the use of renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, and
hydropower, depending on the region. Efcient water treatment facilities and
extensive public transit systems are also important parts of the Eco-City
model (Siemens 2012).
One example of such development is the Tianjin Eco-City Central
Business District, a joint project of the PRC and Singapore that is driven
by private sector investment and development. The 30-square-kilometer
Tianjin Eco-City is envisioned as a harmonious and sustainable community
that will be a modern township where 350,000 residents can live, work, and
play. By demonstrating that environmental protection and urbanization can
progress in tandem with economic activity, the developers aspire to create
an environment that will foster a think green, act green, work green, and
392 Green Cities
live green mindset. As a greeneld development, Tianjin Eco-City provides
an opportunity to experience both hardware and software in areas such
as green buildings, alternative transport solutions, connectivity, pollution,
congestion, energy efciency, eco-urban lifestyle, and economic vibrancy
(Tianjin Eco-City website).
The Republic of Koreas u-Cities: A Holistic
Smart-City Vision?
Perhaps the most comprehensive approach to building smart cities is the
Republic of Koreas u(biquitous)-City initiative. The term ubiquitous refers to
smart-city concepts in which ICT is used to address major urban challenges.
Ubiquitous computing, meaning the technical integration of different urban
elements, uses sensors in buildings, infrastructure, and artifacts to collect
real-time information via wireless networks and to interact with surrounding
physical spaces. Its goal is to integrate ICT into the urban space in order to
provide inhabitants with access to any information they need from anywhere
at any time, and to manage urban infrastructure through intelligent systems
(Figure 8.3).
The rst steps in building a u-City are (i) formulating an urban development
strategy adapted to local conditions; (ii) drawing up an urban development
plan which includes spatial arrangements, facilities, and planning for urban
services; and (iii) establishing a master u-City plan for the application of
ubiquitous technology. To implement u-City concepts, sensors are placed
in all urban structures including roads, water supply systems, parks,
schools, hospitals, buildings, and cars. The data collected from them are
then transmitted over wired and wireless network to an urban integrated
operation center. The real-time information thus provided is used for efcient
urban management. For example, the center is interlinked with the citys
administration and emergency providers so that they can share information
in real time. The system also makes it possible for public service agencies to
rapidly inform city residents about issues of common interest, either through
their own information broadcasting systems, or through information and
telecommunications service providers or broadcasting networks (U-City
World Forum 2011).
The Republic of Korea has selected several local governments for
showcasing particular u-City models. These include Eunpyong-gu in Seoul
(selected as a special u-City for disaster prevention); Busan (prevention of
natural disasters such as radioactivity and tsunamis); Ansan in Gyeonggi-do
province (self-sustaining Smart Green u-Cities); Naju in Jeollanam-do
province (Energypia Cities focusing on energy conservation and low
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 393
carbon emissions); Yeosu in Jeollanam-do province (u-City for international
maritime tourism, leisure, and sports); and Pyeongchang, the host of the 2018
Olympic Winter Games (host of the Smart Olympics). Using this model, the
Republic of Korea has implemented projects such as revitalization of Seouls
old downtown, as well as various projects associated with construction of
new cities (Kim 2012).

One of the Republic of Koreas new u-City developments is Songdo
International Business District. Built on a landll, this new urban
development, which will house a population of 300,000, is a noteworthy
smart-city experiment because it combines technologically advanced
measures with low-tech planning principles. Songdo is 40% green space,
and there is a public transportation system that includes water taxis and
bicycle lanes developed in a way that avoids the need for private car
ownership. Regarding technical aspects, all buildings are built to rigorous
environmental standards, incorporating special window glazing and
ventilated double facades, a network of underground pneumatic pipes for
removing solid waste and recycling of sewage for irrigation and use in cooling
towers. Further, multitasking devices are able to operate the entire living
environment of Songdos inhabitants including air conditioning and heating,
lights that can be turned on and off via mobile phone or computer, video
conference facilities available in every apartment, and green meters that
allow residents to track their daily energy consumption (Hatzelhoffer 2011).
All of this can be done from ones home or ofce, though the distinction
between the two becomes increasingly fuzzy in a fully sensored city such
as Songdo (Sassen 2012).
With the implementation of u-Cities, the Republic of Korea wants to
achieve balanced land development to (i) give people a cleaner, safer, and
happier life; (ii) improve business opportunities and research and development
investments; and (iii) make city management more efcient by improving
services and reducing costs. The u-City concept mainly utilizes a topdown
approach with a heavy focus on ICT and data collection for improving
specic local services. The concept is comprehensive in its approach to its
core objectives of convenience, safety, cleanliness, and health (Figure 8.4).
While the u-City concept includes most smart technologies, its top-led
information-technology focus raises questions of data security and privacy,
even as it makes community-level interactions more efcient. Addressing
such questions might be important for more widespread acceptance of the
u-City concept.
394 Green Cities
Figure 8.3 The Goal of the Republic of Koreas u-City Initiative Is to Provide
u-Services in All Essential Areas of Urban Activity
Relative to the u-City model, the smart city is broader, and therefore more amenable to a holistic approach
to green urban development.
Source: Concept of u-City. http://www.ucta.or.kr/en/ucity/concept.php
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 395
Figure 8.4 Potential Smart Extensions for u-City Concepts
R&D = research and development.
Source: A. Vogl.
Smart Economy
(competitiveness)
Smart Mobility
(connectivity)
Smart Energy
(efficiency)
Smart People
(knowledge)
Examples
for u-City
applications
Potential
smart city
extension
Smart Living
(quality of life)
Smart Governance
(participation)
Smart Environment
(sustainability)
Technology-aided crime safety
system
Mobile device services: healthcare
on real-time basis to make life more
convenient
u-employment/recruitment services
R&D investments for new business
possibilities
u-facility management for buildings
Intelligent street lighting
Real-time monitoring of pollution to
create a clean environment
Disaster response systems and
emergency rescue systems to speed
up assistance
Digital interactive media devices
with touch-screen set up across the
city, so people can conveniently
access information
u-administration
u-city management platform
Strengthen innovation potential of
local industry and business to
create green jobs
Support the use of renewable
energy resources, strengthen energy
efficiency, and implement energy
saving measures
Strengthen environment-friendly
modes of transport like public
transport, bicycling and walking,
(alternative fuel) car-sharing
concepts, etc.
Integrate land-use planning with
green and open spaces
Resilient infrastructure to avoid
urban areas being affected by
natural disasters
Beside consuming information,
people actively provide content
to information systems
Strengthen solidarity among local
community
Enable innovations and
development of mobile application
by open data initiatives
Real-time information on roads,
and up-to-date information such
as transportation accidents to
manage city transport more
efficiently
Implement e-government, open
data initiatives, public consultation
and participation structures
396 Green Cities
Smart-City Concepts for Making Cities Greener
In using smart-city concepts to create greener cities, it is important to have
a common, holistic long-term vision, a midterm road map that also provides
exibility for innovations, and a short-term action plan for (coordinated)
measures within various urban dimensions. The examples below all address
smart urban technologies for creating smarter and more livable cities.
Smart living
Concerning the energy and housing sector,
a climate-neutral building is nice to have,
but is even better when solar panels on the
roof feed back into the grid, when it uses
the district heating and/or cooling from a
nearby industrial zone or waste incineration
plant, and when gray water is used for urban
farming. The latter is becoming a new urban
lifestyle trend. Activities range from simple
balcony boxes to vertical farms supported
by smart technologies that grow food
inside environmentally controlled, multistory
buildings that recycle organic, human, and animal waste and wastewater.
Thinking even further ahead, smarter neighborhoods will evolve and buildings
will be addressed collectively as regards the ecosystem in which they reside.
This will drive measures for fresh air, reducing pollution and emissions, and
built corridors that connect both horizontal and vertical surfaces within the city
and its surroundings. Vertical farms could possibly produce food for a growing
urban population, since one indoor acre is equivalent to 46 outdoor acres or
more, depending upon the crop. For example, for strawberries, 1 indoor acre
equals 30 outdoor acres (The Vertical Farm webpage).
Smart economy
Masdar City, the Republic of Koreas
u-Cities, and the Eco-Cities of Asia and the
Pacic strongly focus on creating industry,
business, and research clusters for green
technologies that use cities as urban
laboratories for creating new job opportu-
nities. For example, Japans Kitakyushu
Eco-Town has created an extensive range
of recycling and environmental industries
that cover a large number of materials and
1
vertical farm
is equivalent
indoor
acre
outdoor
4-6acres
100
GREEN JOBS
worldwide
O
I
M
over the next
2 d e c a d e s
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 397
products from plastic, paper, and metal, to ofce equipment, vehicles, con-
struction waste, and solvents. A smart economy also looks toward creating
incubators for start-ups. For example, Sydneys ATP Innovations incubator
which is part of the Australian Technology Parkmaintains a close working
relationship with universities in assisting technology transfer, providing ofce
and laboratory space for university spin-off companies alongside private entre-
preneurs, and supporting start-ups in raising capital and selling products. The
Sydney-based incubator facilitates growth of technology-based businesses in
life sciences, engineering, and enterprise software (ATP Innovations website).
A shift to a low-carbon, environment-friendly, and climate-resilient economy
could allow cities in Asia and the Pacic to create new jobs and thus reduce
social gaps. The projected number of green jobs that would be created
over the next 2 decades could reach 100 million worldwide. This represents
about 3% of the actual global workforce of over 3 billion (ILO 2008). Some
of these green jobs will be newly created jobs, while others will substitute
for existing jobs.
Smart energy
A major challenge in the energy sectors going
green and smart is the current grid system,
which is mainly not designed for two-way
energy ow. There is thus a need to amend
regulations so that consumers may supply
(renewable) energy back to smart grids
and receive a fair price for doing so. Smart-
energy applications monitor, control, inform,
and automate the delivery and use of energy,
and help consumers by giving information
that reduces energy consumption. Smart-
grid technology and infrastructure development in energy markets in Asia and
the Pacic is a multibillion-dollar industry, which is forecast to grow by almost
35% over the next 5 years (Smart Grids Smart Cities website). With the
implementation of smart grids and smart meters, energy users may also be
able to choose the source of energy (renewable or fossil, local or global) that
they prefer, based on price and the time of use. In addition, smart-energy
technologies include energy-efciency measures like LED streetlights with
sensors that detect movement and adjust illumination (Sant Cugat Smart City
2012), or the retrotting of buildings for higher energy efciency and reduction
of GHG emissions. For less than half the cost of a new nuclear power plant,
1.6 million electrically heated homes in the United States could be retrotted
for energy efciency, thus reducing the need for the same amount of energy
that a new plant would produce. Doing so would also create 90 times more
jobs than replacing an obsolete nuclear power plant (Energy Savvy 2011).
nuclear power plant
1.6
homes
retrofitted
mio
SAVE
US
1
398 Green Cities
Smart mobility
If a city forces its residents to travel in
private cars because there are no light-
rail networks, metro trains, or bus transit
options, it cannot even join a dialogue
with green smart cities. Today, there are
almost 1 billion cars on the road, and this
number is expected to reach 2 billion before
2050. Virtually all of the expected growth in
GHG emissions from the transport sector
will come from private cars and trucks in
emerging economies. The International
Energy Agency has estimated that fuel
consumption and emissions of CO
2
from the worlds cars will roughly
double between 2000 and 2050 (UNEP webpage). In order to support global
reductions in CO
2
emissions from the transport sector, smart technological
innovation will have to work hand in hand with smart policies. Especially for
the urban transport sector, there are many possibilities for cities in becoming
smarter and greener. With sensors, cities can implement congestion charges,
applications for making transit easier, and data collection that can reveal
patterns that encourage better transportation engineering. Real-time data
can, for example, provide guidance to the best available parking spots or
updates on public transport arrival times, making traveling more convenient,
but also more efcient. Nevertheless, to move from a car-centered sprawling
city to a dense, multimodal and green city, a change in peoples behavior is
needed in addition to more energy-efcient structures, technical solutions,
and infrastructure for environment-friendly modes of urban transport.
Therefore, the mutual interaction between the transport system and building
construction must be considered in providing easy and reliable access
to transport.
Smart environment
This dimension stands for how we address ecosystems and environment and
natural resources. For example, in addition to effective water management
and reduction of water loses, there also exist quite small but nevertheless
smart projects that can help the most vulnerable in society achieve better
access to basic services. An example to illustrate this is the NextDrop
Initiative in India. In some regions of the country, water is only available a few
hours a day, and people either spend time waiting for water or do without
it all together. Based on the data provided by water utility providers, the
NextDrop Initiative built a reliable mobile network that noties people by text
messages when the water has been turned on (Next Drop website). More
BETWEEN 2000-2050
will
DOUBLE
co
CARs
2
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 399
complex and high-tech-based concepts in
this regard include waste-to-energy (WTE)
concepts that encompass thermal and
biological conversion technologies. WTE
can extract valuable energy contained
in waste and use it for the production of
electricity, as well as for district heating
and cooling. WTE facilities can prevent the
use of landlls (globally some 73% of all
municipal solid waste is either landlled or
dumped in open pits) and offer an attractive
option for promoting low-carbon growth in
the renewable energy sector. Asia and the Pacicand the PRC in particular,
accounting for 14% of global WTE facilitiesare expanding installed WTE
capacity by at least 250% over the coming decade. This expansion will shift
the center of the WTE universe away from Europe to Asia and the Pacic
(Lawrence 2012).
Smart people
While technology is an enabler, smart
people are the change agents that make use
of smarter and greener neighborhoods and
cities. The bottomup engagement of local
inhabitants, universities, and businesses
in urban development is one dimension of
smart cities that will be of growing
importance, especially in times of tight
public budgets. The internet of things,
meaning the online representation
of real-time data, will arm people
with instantaneous information, thus
proliferating new smart applications and enabling smarter decision making.
In this context, experiments like Urban Prototyping Weekends are using
from the ground up innovation to improve urban environments through
the use of technology and open data by giving stakeholders like residents,
entrepreneurs, government employees, and researchers an opportunity to
develop and prototype innovative solutions that make cities smarter (UP
Singapore webpage). The same is true of social media platforms developed
by local communities like nexthamburg.de (Germany), xmystreet.com
(e.g., in Canada, India, the Republic of Korea, and the United Kingdom), and
seeclickx.com (United States) that engage citizens in dialogue regarding
urban needs. These allow people to voice problems, make proposals for
neighborhood development, and contact local government agencies through
FixMyStreet
REPORTS
215,000
February 2007
since
400 Green Cities
the internet. In the United Kingdom alone, more than 215,000 reports have
been sent through FixMyStreet since its launch in February 2007. This is
an average of 100 messages concerning potholes, broken streetlights,
and other problems that are communicated to local authorities each day.
Those reports are the work of over 87,000 people, 52% of whom had never
before reported an issue to a council. FixMyStreet is built on open code, so
that it can be replicated by anyone with appropriate technical knowledge
(FixMyStreet 2012).
Smart Governance
In addition to comprehensive urban
operation centers like Rio de Janeiros, to
become smarter, cities need to bring in all
their stakeholders from the beginning
including also the private sectorsince
collaboration is what makes a city smart.
Smart governance often builds on information
technology infrastructure investments made
by the public sector. Back-ofce systems
help to improve efciency and integration
of services, and front-ofce systems
support multichannel communication with
citizens and transactional service areas such as energy, transport, and
waste management, particularly in relation to the goal of transitioning to
environmental sustainability. The use of ICT also makes it possible to locate
public-service facilities that are located close to clients, whether through a
government-agency kiosk, or through a personal computer. For example,
Tirunelveli in Tamil Nadu (India) employs a number of e-governance initiatives
including systems that track the condition of streetlights and the status of
garbage collection; that monitor town planning, and also address complaints
or collect taxes and fees. Another example is Ho Chi Minh City (Viet Nam)
that is simplifying administrative procedures faced by businesses as a way of
promoting investment. The city has established an online one-stop shop for
business license applications, which has also enabled administrative reforms
and has inspired simplication of administrative procedures. Citizens benet
by spending less time waiting and traveling, and having better information
provided to them (Wescott 2003). Similarly, in Hong Kong, China, the internet
is the preferred channel for contacting the city government in that it accounts
for 55% of all public access to government services (Yeo 2011).
INTERNET
of all access
55%
to government
via SERVICES
Smart Concepts for Greener Cities 401
Conclusion
In the 21st century, science and technology will assume increasing importance
in society, and new inventions capable of making our cities greener will be
developed. But smart-city approaches are much more than technologies.
Smart cities are about synergies and partnerships. Technologies within and
across services can generate much greater benets than can individual
technological xes. For example, the combined development of a high-
capacity public transport system together with adjacent high-density,
high-amenity, and energy-efcient urban development will have a greater
greenhouse gas reduction impact than the sum of individual transport and
urban-development investments.
Smart cities need partnerships among national and local governments,
administration, businesses, and residents to deliver smart solutions for
reducing infrastructure and service costs, while at the same time improving
the quality of life. Todays cities have new options for integrating technologies
into existing infrastructure and services. However, to enable inclusive and
green outcomes, they will also need to choose between how much they
want to manage and control infrastructure, and how much they want to
control their relationships with their residents. The smart-city concept offers
potential solutions to issues such as nding a balance in environmental
concerns, economic development, and the need to provide a higher quality
of life for Asias urban population. These smart-city approaches must be
exible enough to respond to local social and economic circumstances.
A smart city is responsive to the needs and hope of its residents. It offers
accessible, affordable, and quality education and healthcare systems, [and]
sustainable, innovative, and safe transport for all. It creates conditions to
provide adequate housing and basic services and strives to improve the housing
conditions of the urban poor. The city promotes the growth, preservation, and
development of recreation services, parks, and green spaces to enrich the
leisure needs of its inhabitants, with pedestrian walkways and bicycling lanes.
Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director, UN-HABITAT
Source: Inaugural Address at the UN Pavilion Lecture Series at the Shanghai World Expo 2010.
402 Green Cities
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406
Conclusion: Green Cities
Will Become a Reality
by Michael Lindeld and Florian Steinberg
T
he preceding chapters have described numerous initiatives that can
be undertaken to make Green Cities a reality. They have likewise
described the dynamism of the cities that are currently undertaking
such initiatives. A review of the group of intervention described in this book
that cities may undertake to move toward environmental sustainability
shows that the cities that do undertake these interventions all share several
characteristics. First, policy makers in these cities are innovative in that they
are determined to build on cross-sectoral synergies that have historically
either been ignored or were thought to not exist at all. Second, these cities
all tend to use integrated planning and management as policy vehicles for
taking full advantage of these synergies, this naturally leading to integrated
implementation of the investments undertaken. Both integrated planning
and management of initiatives take advantage of the now-obvious fact that
implementing such measures in a piecemeal fashion produces signicantly
fewerand more scatteredpositive development impacts than if synergies
are exploited through integrated planning and management.
Third, exploiting these synergies to their fullest extent requires not
only the support and cooperation of all stakeholders concerned but also
an understanding on their part of how these synergies interplay to build
momentum toward environmental sustainability. This requires inuencing
the attitudes and behaviors of all stakeholders, which is best done by
providing timely, complete information that is delivered in a transparent
fashion. Providing both positive and negative incentives for behavior change
likewise accelerates shifts in attitudes and behaviors, as well as acceptance
to change itself. Finally, widespread understanding of the importance of
nance to fund successful implementation is necessary for all potential
synergies to be fully exploited. The following sections elaborate on these
four key characteristics of successful integrated implementation.
Stakeholders. While changing the attitudes and behaviors of stakeholders
always requires more effort than does pursuing status-quo approaches,
it is precisely this effort that will in the end ensure that Green Cities will
Conclusion: Green Cities Will Become a Reality 407
become a reality. Currently, some are skeptical about the nancial viability
and feasibility of Green Cities for Asia and the Pacic in that they believe
that the region cannot afford the transition to Green Cities. However, the
basic assumption underlying such a view is that environmental degradation
is an inconvenience that can easily be nanced through economic advance.
This assumption unfortunately ignores the fact that continuing degradation
of the natural resource basethat is the very source of economic advance
itselfhas been shown in this book to lead to ever-increasing costs. Thus
in the end, transitioning to Green Cities will ultimately be seen as the least-
cost approach to sustaining the regions current rate of economic advance.
For this and other reasons, we are convinced that the greening of cities
and support for environmental sustainability will assume ever-increasing
importance in the international development agenda over the coming
decades, this ultimately being linked to widespread momentum toward the
greening of entire economies.
Innovation and Synergies
Innovations. It is obvious from most of the chapters in this book that
there increasingly exists an inspiring range of technological and systems
innovations in many sectors that will positively impact the cities of the
future. Furthermore, these innovations are occurring in all sectors, including
construction and building technology, urban transport, energy, water
and sanitation, waste management, and smart technologies, all of these
potentially resulting in life-changing modications of the urban metabolism.
Synergies born of innovation. The pace of innovation has accelerated
considerably over the past decade, and will likely accelerate further in
coming years. Further, synergies among innovations appear to be likewise
multiplying, as the concept of Green Cities itself revolutionizes the way we
think about urban life issues such as mobility, enclosing space for commercial
or domestic purposes, controlling temperature, or communicating. These new
ways of thinking have created now-obvious synergies in sectors previously
thought to be unrelated. For example, synergies in the public transport and
land management sectors can facilitate the creation of cities that are cleaner
and more compact, and that are low-carbon or even zero-carbon energy
users. Innovations such as emissions-free automobiles powered by fuel
cells, and the phasing out of obsolete and polluting 20th-century production
technologies will likewise greatly reduce the ecological footprint of cities,
as will widespread application of solar power that vastly alters the energy
balance of buildings and even entire urban areas. Cross-sectoral synergies
among such innovations abound, simply because they impact the totality of
urban life.
408 Green Cities
Need for Integrated Planning and Implementation
Planning. To transform the archetypical chaotic, polluted, inequitable
Asian city into a competitive, equitable, and environmentally sustainable
urban areain short, a livable citywill require a new approach to urban
development, as well as support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB)
for that development (ADB 2008). Central to this transformation will be a
renewed emphasis on integrated planning in the provision of environmental
infrastructure, basic services, and other public goods. Through its urban
operations, ADB will support a planning approach that treats urban areas
as systems instead of supporting ad hoc, individual interventions on a
piecemeal basis. Planning of this type is both holistic and specic in that it
initially considers urban development from an overall perspective, and then
selectively pursues specic investments that are consistent with this overall
view. Perhaps nowhere is this balance between an overall urban development
plan and the underwriting of specic initiatives more important than in the
sequencing and timing of specic initiatives, as well as in the engagement
with development partners in this regard. Such an approach is consistent
with the fact that development of livable cities is a long-term process that
can be optimized only through integrated planning and implementation of
the specic investments undertaken.
Implementation. Even given integrated planning, many potential benets
of individual interventions may be lost if implementation is not likewise
integrated. Exploiting the synergies referred to at the beginning of this
chapter in large part depends on the sequencing of investments rather than
simply on their physical provision. Construction of high-density housing
that lacks public transport connections will undoubtedly generate additional
car trips, and thus lead to additional congestion and pollution, both of
which lower the quality of urban life. However, if public transport facilities
are provided in advance of high-density housing being occupied, these
negative impacts can be avoided. In addition to appropriate sequencing of
interventions, integrated planning takes account of the particular level of
national per-capita income in the urban area concerned, as this impacts
affordability and hence nancing.
Benchmarking and indexes. Benchmarking of cost and implementation
performance as well as outcomes are likewise important components of
integrated implementation in that implementation of initiatives proceeds
more smoothly if urban policy makers are aware of how implementation is
proceeding relative to performance criteria laid out in their own urban plans,
and likewise relative to the implementation performance of other cities.
For this purpose, ADB is developing a National Infrastructure Information
System that is used to benchmark individual projects. Likewise, Green City
Conclusion: Green Cities Will Become a Reality 409
Indexes already exist that allow urban policy makers to address shortfalls in
the green performance of particular cities (Siemens AG 2011).
Attitudes and Behavior
The role of the middle class. Some innovations such as green building
technologies, the greening of neighborhoods, electric bicycles, and low-
carbon cars and home appliances are likely to initially be driven by middle-
class consumption patterns. That said, the preferences of the middle class
over time tend to spread to society overall, thus leading to wide acceptance
of technological innovations. As going green becomes fashionable in
middle-class circles, the demand for green products will likely expand, thus
enabling economies of scale that reduce the costs of such products, in turn
allowing lower-income groups to mime the preferences of the middle class
in purchasing them. This is likely to ultimately lead to acceptance of both
green products and urban technologies on a mass scale. The fact that the
middle class is growing rapidly in both absolute size and percentage share
of the national population in nearly all of the regions countries suggests
that consumer acceptance of green products and technologies is likely to
grow over time. Similarly, as government revenues expand in tandem with
per-capita income growth, public sector uptake of green technologies on a
national scale is likely to accelerate.
Adoption of Green Cities Planning and Technologies
Gross
Domestic
Product
Least Developed
Countries
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Urban agriculture
Least-income
Countries
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Urban agriculture
Middle-income
Countries
(Eco-cities
development)
Compact Cities
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Green construction
Urban agriculture
technology
Smart technologies
High-income
Countries
(Eco-cities
development)
Compact Cities
Green transportation
Clean water supply
Wastewater treatment
Waste management
Clean energy
Green construction
technology
Urban agriculture
Smart technologies
Time
Source: F. Steinberg and M. Lindeld. 2012.
410 Green Cities
The fact that the technologies envisioned by the ecologists of the 1970s,
such as green and clean buildings, roof-top greening, and (vertical) urban
agriculture, are components of todays technological development stream
suggests that the demand for such innovations will be a likely response to
rising prices of fossil fuels and conventional construction practices.
Inclusiveness. There is no point in planning a Green City if social and income
barriers mitigate against its implementation. For example, rivers can never
be cleaned if they comprise the only cost-effective waste disposal option
for low-income communities living along their banks. Thus to become a
reality, Green Cities must support provision of basic infrastructure at the
community level and connection of such infrastructure to city main systems.
In this regard, ADB coordinates with both the governments concerned and
other development partners in addressing such requirements, as these are
prerequisites to making Green Cities a reality. Assistance in building the
implementation and administration capacity of neighborhood organizations,
civil society, and governments in support of inclusive development will
likewise be required for Green Cities.
The All-Important Issue of Finance
How can transforming investments be nanced? In recent years,
many institutions including ADB have begun to nance interventions in
energy efciency and low-carbon transport. Due to ADBs long-standing
commitment to energy efciency, this trend will likely continue in coming
decades. However, the cost of a full transition to Green City status for any
of the regions existing cities is likely to be beyond the means of both ofcial
development assistance and government nance. This implies that ensuring
the continued ow of nance for transforming investments will require new
private sector nancial instruments. Given Asias relatively high savings rates,
as well as the considerable investible resources of pension and insurance
funds in higher-income countries, the costs of transforming investment can
be nanced, given appropriate private sector nancial instruments.
Consumer loans made through private sector entities may well be
another vehicle for nancing the transition to Green Cities. For example, the
cement producer Holcim has successfully extended consumer nancing to
its customers in Mexico and Indonesia, a practice that may be replicated
on a large scale in nancing numerous construction-related activities that
transition consumers will undertake to green practices and lifestyles.
Incentives. Given expanding private sector nancial ows to transforming
investment, the role of the public sector will likely increasingly be that of a
motivator and intermediary of private sector engagement and investment
Conclusion: Green Cities Will Become a Reality 411
in Green Cities. The scenario by which this might occur includes national
banks becoming signicant lenders in support of local innovation by private
investors, with the role of multilateral nance institutions increasingly being
that of supporting these national nancing institutions through loans or
guarantees. Financial instruments that incorporate results-based lending
will likely be used to underwrite technological innovation.
There is considerable scope for urban policy makers to support the
transition to Green Cities through urban planning and management. For
example, both can be increasingly used to promote construction of green
buildings, water conservation, waste recycling and reuse, and adoption
of green technologies, as well as green practices in energy generation.
Numerous instruments can be used for incentivizing adoption of all of the
above. Increasing the ratio of a buildings oor space to the total area of the
plot on which it is constructed for persons or entities that invest in green
technology innovation provides but one example. Such a policy intervention
could trigger not only accelerated application of energy-efcient and green
technologies but also higher urban densities and urban efciencies.
ADB pipeline. Under ADBs Urban Operational Plan (2012), a number of
innovative nancial products are proposed in support of the transition to
Green Cities. These include (i) guarantees for green investments to be
used by national public or private nancing institutions; and (ii) preferential
public sector lending in support of clean energy, green transport, and
green buildings.
Conclusion
Will there be Green Cities for all? Currently, the notion of Green Cities
exists in the real world in the form of individual experiments with Green City
technologies that are more or less equally distributed across the worlds
regions. This bodes well for the scaling-up of such technologies, particularly
in rapidly urbanizing Asia. The fact that the regions population densities
are expected to grow substantially over the coming decades suggests that
scale economies could signicantly reduce the costs of transitioning to
green technologies, thus incentivizing their uptake on a large scale.
How long will it take? Transformation of todays cities will not occur
overnight. Global-scale application of green technologies is thus likely
to be an evolution rather than a revolution. But as the rapid spread of
communications-based products has demonstrated, new technologies can
spread very quickly, particularly when costs fall rapidly, thus enabling scale
economies in production, and hence decrease in price to levels that make
such products affordable on a mass scale. Furthermore, as the continuing
412 Green Cities
transformation of the older industrial urban areas of Europe and the United
States has demonstrated, industrial blight and dilapidated buildings can
be replaced within a few decades. This suggests a similar trajectory of
transition to green city status for Asias urban areas, once affordable green
technologies come to market and consumer preferences turn toward
products based on such technologies as a result of their quality, low cost,
and inherent environmental benets.
References
ADB. 2008. Strategy 2020: The Long-Term Strategic Framework of the Asian
Development Bank 20082020. Manila.
. 2012. Urban Operational Plan. Manila.
Siemens AG. 2011. Asian Green City Index. Assessing the environmental
performance of Asias major cities. Munich.

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